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Texas
Straight Talk
www.house.gov/paul
Hope
for the Economy
By
Rep. Ron Paul
March
4, 2008
It
is becoming harder and harder for Washington and the mainstream
media to ignore the ripple effect the collapse of the housing bubble
is having on the economy. Inflation is up, cost of food is up,
oil and gold are up, foreclosures are up, unemployment is up,
government spending is at record highs, its seems that the only
thing down is the value of the dollar. The middle and lower
classes are getting squeezed as prices jump and wages stay flat.
Though
it is good that
Washington
is acknowledging the problem instead of sweeping it under the rug, I
always get nervous at their ideas of solutions. A proper
solution requires an honest, in-depth look at the root of the
problem.
What
the government needs to stop doing is taxing Americans literally out
of house and home in the wake of the housing debacle. We
should not take money from taxpayers to bail out bad businesses. At
the same time, we need to make sure that
America
can get back to work by easing taxes and regulations on good
businesses and allow them to function and prosper. Also there
a lot of tax cuts and tax reforms we could be making to ease the
burden on the American people.
I
have many bills in Congress that address the high taxes Americans
pay, but one in particular – my Tax-Free Tips Act – should be a
no-brainer at a time like this. This legislation would exempt
gratuities earned by service sector workers from income tax
liability. A tip is a small gift and there is no contractual
requirement to give it, yet if someone leaves a restaurant without
tipping, the IRS will still estimate how much they should have been
tipped and tax the waiter based on that, should they perform an
audit. This is patently wrong.
People
working these jobs are the backbone of our economy, and they often
support a family or put themselves through school on this money.
They are already taxed on their base wages through withholding.
They should not be taxed on tips. We do not need to put this
kind of pressure on our service workers.
To
really fix the economy and get it back on track, though, a sea
change, not a quick-fix attempt, is needed. I was very pleased
and encouraged that on Friday the Wall Street Journal published my
letter to the editor addressing some of our economic problems.
The message is getting out because people are demanding answers.
The American people are strong, resourceful, hard working and
determined. Because of this we can get through these tough
economic times, but our leaders need to understand how we got here
in the first place. Continuing the same flawed policies that
got us here will only prolong the agony.
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