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Economic Issues
Dick
Armey And IDT Tell Iowans That Discounts On Your Taxes,
And Optional, Personal Social Security Accounts Make You
Better Off, And Winning The War Against Terrorists A
Certainty ......
Former US House Majority Leader, Dick Armey, came to Des
Moines on September 19th as guest speaker for
Iowans for Discounted Taxes to celebrate the new
“discounts” that allow Iowa’s seniors to begin living
TAX-FREE in 2007. If you’re 65 or older and file a
single return you get up to $30,000 of income TAX-FREE
next year; $48,000 for married couples.
Armey’s main message was that Americans have a higher
standard of living than anyone else because we have more
freedom to produce and be successful. So Americans
are willing to pay the price to send armies anywhere to
defend our freedom.
Unfortunately, it’s just the opposite in many countries,
like France, where the standard of living is so much lower
that they do not have the will to defend themselves
because the costs look like another tax that will further
reduce their standard of living.
But Americans have to demand changes now in order to avoid
disaster. Without discounts on taxes and
personalized Social Security accounts that you will own,
young Americans face the Alternative Minimum Tax, which
will be a tax increase every year due to inflation, and
payroll taxes of 22-24% in order to keep Social Security
solvent. And we haven’t considered Medicare yet.
So younger Americans, like members of every other great
nation, historically, will be worn out by taxes until they
won’t care who governs them. Then we will have no
armies to defend us, not unlike the Europeans. But
it doesn’t have to be this way. We have the time to
make the changes. Iowans simply have to demand them
from everyone running for office, especially presidential
candidates.
This year Iowa began leading the nation to the rewarding
solution of discounting income taxes. And we also
need to demand personalized Social Security accounts and
an end to disgraceful government spending.
According to Mr. Armey, we have about 10 years left to
provide personal accounts to any younger American who
wants one, protecting the benefits for seniors and
building real assets for themselves. By 2017 Social
Security will no longer be running large surpluses and our
opportunity will be gone.
The terrorists know this and are counting on our
government and all the politicians to wear us out.
Dick Armey and IDT are calling on the Iowa Christian
Alliance and every Iowan who gets it, to stop the nonsense
by supporting only those candidates who love our freedom
as much as we do.
Kevin McLaughlin, President
Iowans for Discounted Taxes
www.iowansfordiscountedtaxes.org
Published September 27, 2005
By Saxby Chambliss, John Linder, Steve King
and Kevin Brady
As the President's Advisory Panel on Federal Tax Reform prepares to send its
recommendations to the Treasury secretary next month, we hope that it will
propose to abolish our indecipherable and unwieldy income-tax code and replace
it with a tax on personal consumption. Slowly but surely, large macroeconomic
forces are pushing the federal government away from income-based taxation and
toward consumption-based taxation.
As our tax code has grown more complicated in the last 15 years, compliance
costs for both businesses and families have skyrocketed. According to IRS data
for tax year 2003, 60 percent of people filing tax returns retained professional
assistance to do so. Businesses, likewise, are incurring enormous tax-compliance
costs themselves and passing these costs along to consumers in the form of
higher and higher prices.
While current tax-compliance costs are estimated between $250 billion and
$450 billion a year, these costs do not produce a new job, build a new plant or
create a new invention. To the contrary, these costs are a dead weight on our
economy, slowing it down and hindering its ability to expand. Adopting a tax on
personal consumption will enable the elimination of these costs, effectively
reducing the burden of America's tax system by $2 trillion to $4 trillion over
the next ten years. This kind of stimulus will help America retain its role as
the locomotive of the world's economy.
This year, there has been a growing debate about how best to ensure the
long-term solvency of the Social Security program. The long-term financing
problems facing Medicare are, in fact, far worse than those facing Social
Security. Together, these valuable safety-net programs, financed by 158 million
current workers, provide benefits to about 45 million retirees. Yet, when the
baby boom generation retires, and the number of Social Security/Medicare
beneficiaries doubles in only 35 years, the workforce will have grown by only 15
percent, to 180 million.
Moving from a payroll tax to a personal consumption tax provides both Social
Security and Medicare with needed long-term financial solvency. Rather than try
to maintain these programs on a fraction of the total U.S. population, a tax on
personal consumption dramatically broadens our tax base to include all 295
million Americans and an estimated 30 million to 40 million foreign tourists and
visitors. This more than doubles the federal government's tax base. And, when
the size of the economy doubles, as has been predicted, federal revenues will
double, thereby ensuring that Social Security and Medicare will be there for all
retirees.
Today, our income tax code taxes repatriated income, income earned abroad by
U.S. companies, at 35 percent. This serves to keep the bulk of these monies
outside the United States, because it's cheaper for our companies to borrow
money at 6 percent than to bring this money back into the U.S. at 35 percent.
Replacing business and labor taxes with a tax on personal consumption will
serve to encourage our businesses to bring this expatriated income home.
According to some estimates, there are upwards of $10 trillion in offshore
financial accounts. Most of these funds would come flowing back into our economy
to invest in new plants or new technology, by providing much needed liquidity.
Individual and institutional investors would also watch as their stocks and
bonds benefit from this influx of capital. As some of our most famous public
companies are struggling with major pension funding problems, bringing these
funds back into the U.S. economy serves to help these Fortune 100 companies as
well.
Our current income tax is a stifling impediment to growth, and these
fundamental problems cannot be changed by simply "tweaking" the code yet again,
as we have done year after year after year. It's time for a bold change. It's
time for a new vision of federal tax collection policy. It's time for a tax on
personal consumption. We hope that the President's Advisory Panel on Federal Tax
Reform will seize this rare opportunity to help lead our country in a new and
exciting direction.
Sen. Saxby Chambliss and Rep. John
Linder are Republicans from Georgia. Rep. Steve King is a Republican from Iowa.
Rep. Kevin Brady is a Republican from Texas.
KING INTRODUCES RESOLUTION TO ELIMINATE IRS
King Bill to Repeal 16th Amendment to
Constitution
WASHINGTON
- As W-2s arrive in mailboxes this week, U.S.
Congressman
Steve King has introduced a resolution
to repeal the 16th Amendment to the
Constitution, which gives Congress the
authority to collect income taxes.
H.J. Res. 16 would eliminate the IRS and the means
for the government to collect
income taxes.
"The IRS is an out-of-date, trillion-dollar-a-year
drag on our economy," said King.
"Instead of continuing to band-aid our
complicated, leaking tax system year after year,
we can choose a permanent solution and finally rid
Americans of the fat leech they
feed their paychecks to."
King has been a
long-time supporter of the FairTax, a national
sales tax placed on
goods and services, which would replace the income
tax.
H.J. Res. 16 must be approved by two-thirds of
both the House and Senate, and then
sent to the states, where three-fourths must
ratify the amendment.
For information on
the FairTax, visit
www.fairtax.org
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