Let's put aside Gov. Daniels for a moment.(If someone could find the video of him producing those numbers to the public would be helpful.)IUC, the core problem with what you’re saying here is that federal tax revenues (as %GDP) have more or less remained flat since the 1950s. They rarely get above 18% and they rarely get below 16%. When they do, it’s because of ephemeral macroeconomic conditions - such as in the wake of 2008-9, when they dipped below 15%. On the high side, the dotcom boom put them briefly near 20%. They always revert to the mean within a couple years.
Here’s a table with every year going back to 1950 to demonstrate.
Keep in mind what marginal income tax rates have done over that period. In 1950, the top rate was 91%! In 1964, it went to 70%. In the mid-80s it briefly got as low as 28%. And it’s mostly settled in the high 30s ever since — 39.6% or 37.6%.
But spending is another story. See if you can spot the trend in federal spending as %GDP. It doesn’t revert to any mean. On the contrary, it has followed a very clear trend.
These two charts illustrate our problem. It is not that we haven’t taxed enough. We’ve had very high tax rates during this period. It’s that our spending has grown.
And I don’t think many people have internalized that the problem is set to get significantly worse….because of entitlements. They’re on auto-pilot. And the metrics that determine their annual outlays are moving away from Treasury’s favor, not towards it.
Also, set aside the government spending side for a moment. We should all agree that entitlements are the driver. The solution is not that difficult. It’s the ability of politicians to quit politicking that hinders.
Let's stay on revenues. One problem is the way revenues are reported. Another problem is the way revenues are viewed.
Like you’ve done here, stating that rates aren't as important because receipts generally come in at ~17%, is disingenuous. Rates are extremely important. When top marginal rates were 91% people were forced to spend capital on tax deductible items, such as labor and equipment. This artificially stimulated demand/consumption.
Rates also limited the ability of companies to outsource(nominal manufacturing jobs peaked in 1979)(Disney moved to guest workers around 1990 and on and on), and pay executives exorbitant amounts of money. (Insert ceo compensation chart here.) Rates matter for a multitude of reasons.
A major problem this country has is the way taxes are viewed and discussed. Taxes are viewed as government thievery. The right uses percentage of tax receipts as argument in favor of their policies. And people eat it up. Ha.
As I stated above money is relative. You don't pay taxes alone. We pay taxes. And the fact that the top 1% keep paying the higher percentage of taxes is bad for the vast majority of Americans.
When I was younger, I complained about my bill for drying gas for my corn. An old farmer told me I should stop complaining because that bill was a privilege.
Not having a bill for drying gas would have been much worse.
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