We
Americans cherish our myths. One myth is that there is more social mobility in
the United States than in Europe . That’s false. Another myth is that the government
is smaller here than in Europe . That’s largely
false, too.
The U.S. does not
have a significantly smaller welfare state than the European nations. We’re
just better at hiding it. The Europeans provide welfare provisions through
direct government payments. We do it through the back door via tax breaks.
For
example, in Europe , governments offer health
care directly. In the U.S. ,
we give employers a gigantic tax exemption to do the same thing. European
governments offer public childcare. In the U.S. , we have child tax credits. In
Europe , governments subsidize favored
industries. We do the same thing by providing special tax deductions and
exemptions for everybody from ethanol producers to Nascar track owners.
These tax
expenditures are hidden but huge. Budget experts Donald Marron and Eric Toder
added up all the spending-like tax preferences and found that, in 2007, they
amounted to $600 billion. If you had included those preferences as government
spending, then the federal government would have actually been one-fifth larger
than it appeared.
You might
say that a tax break isn’t the same as a spending program. You would be wrong.
David
Bradford, a Princeton economist, has the best
illustration of how the system works. Suppose the Pentagon wanted to buy a new
fighter plane. But instead of writing a $10 billion check to the manufacturer,
the government just issued a $10 billion “weapons supply tax credit.” The plane
would still get made. The company would get its money through the tax credit.
And politicians would get to brag that they had cut taxes and reduced the size
of government!
This is
essentially what’s been happening in sphere after sphere. Government controls
more and more of the economy. It just does it by getting people to do what it
wants by manipulating the tax code. Politicians get to take credit for
addressing problem after problem, but none of their efforts show up as
unpopular spending.
Many of
these individual tax expenditures are good for the country, like the charitable
deduction and the earned income tax credit. But, as the economist Bruce
Bartlett demonstrates in his impeccably fair-minded book, “The Benefit and the
Burden,” the cumulative effect of these tax breaks is terrible. Like overgrown
weeds, the tangle of tax breaks distorts behavior, clogs the economy and
deprives the government of revenue.
And because
they are hidden, many of the tax expenditures go to those who need them least,
the well connected and established over the vulnerable and the entrepreneurial.
The good
news is that change might finally be coming. The Obama administration has
always theoretically supported a simpler tax code even while operationally it
has often muddied it up. Nonetheless, this week, Treasury Secretary Timothy
Geithner unveiled a modest but sensible plan to simplify the corporate tax
code. The plan is not perfect. The Obama technocrats love tinkering and
complexity. But Geithner’s plan moves us a small step in the right direction
and provides a sensible foundation for the big tax negotiations to come.
Mitt Romney
has a bigger proposal, which reduces individual rates across the board and
closes some loopholes. It’s more comprehensive than the Geithner approach, but
it suffers from two weaknesses. First, it’s politics as usual. Romney is
specific about the candy — lower tax rates — but vague about the vegetables —
what loopholes would have to be closed to pay for them.
Moreover,
it’s unimaginative. Republicans are perpetually trying to do what Ronald Reagan
did. But top tax rates today aren’t as onerous as they were in 1980, so
lowering them won’t produce as many benefits. Imagine if Reagan ran for office
promising to recreate the glory days of Thomas Dewey and you get a sense of how
much G.O.P. thinking is stuck in the past.
Still,
let’s take our good news where we can get it. Attention is shifting to tax
expenditures and not just direct spending. It’s becoming clear how gargantuan,
opaque and inefficient the U.S.
government has become. Maybe before long our political leaders will actually
summon the political will to take on the special interests that defend these
tax breaks.
This should
be the top priority: A tax reform effort that simplifies government frees the
economy and focuses social support on those who actually need it. A left-right
tax reform alliance to do that would break the political logjam as well as the
economic one.
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