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Texas
Straight Talk
www.house.gov/paul
The
Double Trouble of Taxation
By
Rep. Ron Paul
April
23, 2008
Taxes were on the
forefront of many Americans’ minds this week as they scrambled to
meet the April 15th deadline to file their returns.
Tax policy in this country hurts taxpayers twice – once
when they pay taxes, and then when the government spends the money.
Americans are sick and tired of the financial burden and the
endless forms to fill out. To add insult to
injury, after collecting this money the government does some very
detrimental things to the economy.
The burden of
complying with the income tax is tremendous. Since
its inception in 1913, the tax code has gone from 400 pages to over
67,000. The Tax Foundation estimates that around
$265 billion dollars and 6 billion hours are spent just on
compliance. That expense amounts to about 22
cents of every dollar the IRS collects. Imagine
the boon to the economy if we spent that time and money expanding
our businesses and creating jobs!
Aside from the
direct loss of money and productivity, the funds from the income tax
enable the government to do some very destructive things, such as
vastly over-regulating economic activity, making it difficult to
earn money in the first place. The federal
government funds over 50 agencies, departments and commissions that
formulate rules and regulations. These
bureaucracies operate with little to no oversight from the people or
Congress and generate around 4,000 new rules every year and operate
at a cost of about 40 billion dollars. There are some 75,000 pages
of regulations in the Federal Register that Americans are expected
to know and abide by. Complying with these
governmental regulations costs American businesses more than one
trillion dollars per year, according to a study by Mark Crain for
the Small Business Administration. This
complicated system drives production to other countries and shrinks
our job market here at home.
Big government is
destructive when it takes your money and when it spends it.
There is no economic benefit to supporting a government
sector as massive as ours. In fact, this country
thrived for well over 100 years without an income tax. Today,
if you took away the income tax, the government would still have
revenue from other sources equal to total government spending in
1990, when government was still too big. $1.2
trillion should be more than enough to fund a government operating
within its constitutional confines, and that is exactly what we need
to get back to.
I have introduced
legislation many times to abolish the IRS and the income tax.
It is fundamentally un-American to require taxpayers to
testify against themselves and be considered guilty until proven
innocent. Abolishing the IRS altogether would
trigger an avalanche of real growth in the economy.
With these
financial hard times only just beginning, this would be the most
efficient and logical way to get our economy growing again, and
Americans would need not dread the 15th of April every
year.
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