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The Perfect Tax
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The expansion of government
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is limited by the consent of the governed. Once upon a time, that consent was
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harder to come by. In 1776, American colonists took up arms against a
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government far less oppressive than the one that now spends 40 percent of our
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incomes. We're more docile now, but the threat of revolution--or at least mass
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dissatisfaction--remains an important force for good. We can harness that force
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by designing laws and institutions that require each new government burden to
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be widely shared. Politicians are less likely to risk annoying 60 percent of
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the electorate than 10 percent.
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That
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wisdom underlies the "takings clause" in the Fifth Amendment to the
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Constitution, which says, in effect, that the government can't take your front
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lawn and turn it into a park without paying you for it. The takings clause
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forces taxpayers to share in the cost of any taking, and so ensures that
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frivolous takings will meet broad opposition. Inspired by the same logic, I
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propose a constitutional amendment capping everyone's tax bill at (say) five
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times the average. Thus, if the average American pays $10,000 in taxes some
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year, no American could be required to pay more than $50,000 that year. That
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would force many taxpayers to share the cost of any new government spending,
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and so ensure broad opposition to the growth of government.
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It's traditional to evaluate tax proposals according to the
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twin standards of "equity" and "efficiency." Before I subject my own proposal
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to those standards, let's talk a bit about the standards themselves.
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A tax system is "inefficient"
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when it discourages beneficial economic activities. By discouraging working,
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saving, and investment, the United States tax code--like any tax system--meets
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that standard with ease. The only completely efficient tax would be one that
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does not depend on anything the taxpayer can control--such as a "head tax" of
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$5,000 per year. If your behavior can't affect your tax bill, your tax bill
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won't affect your behavior.
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That kind
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of head tax is interesting not as a realistic policy proposal but as a
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benchmark for comparison: Economists like to say that a head tax has the
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advantage of being perfectly efficient (it does not discourage any economic
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activity), but the disadvantage of being perfectly inequitable (the rich and
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the poor pay equal amounts). But those economists are wrong on both counts.
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Let's talk first about equity. It is an act of
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violence against the English language to describe as "inequitable" a tax that
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charges everyone an equal amount. In the rhetoric of tax policy, the word
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"inequitable" almost never means "inequitable"; rather, it means something like
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"less redistributionist than the speaker would prefer."
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But I
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don't want to dismiss a substantive concern just because people frequently
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choose the wrong word to describe it. Instead, let me make a substantive
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response: Even if you believe that the tax system should be used to iron out
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income differentials, it's still perfectly easy to devise a head tax that is
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consistent with your redistributionist philosophy. The key is to make taxes
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dependent on variables that are good predictors of income but entirely
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outside the taxpayer's control. For example, whites (on average) earn more than
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blacks do. A direct tax on income might discourage work. But taxing whiteness
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would not discourage anything, while still redistributing income (on average)
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from the relatively rich to the relatively poor. A tax of "$10,000 per year if
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you're white and $5,000 per year if you're black" is a perfectly .
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On similar grounds, we could tax people for being male or
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tall or beautiful; all these traits are positively correlated with income. In
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the case of beauty, though, we'd have to be careful to tax only natural beauty.
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Otherwise, we'd discourage expenditure on shampoo, cosmetics, and dentistry.
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(In fact, if we enjoy having beautiful neighbors, we might want to
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subsidize beauty rather than tax it; you can't always pursue two
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goals--in this case income redistribution and an attractive
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population--simultaneously.) Regardless of what you mean by "equity,"
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therefore, you can always adjust the head-tax system to conform to your
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philosophy. Thus "inequity" (or, more accurately, "insufficient redistributive
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power") is not a good .
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But just as the alleged
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inequity of head taxes is no vice, so may their vaunted efficiency be no
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virtue. The problem with an efficient tax system is that it provides no
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built-in brake on the government's avarice. A government that takes $10,000
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from everybody this year could decide to take $20,000 or $30,000 next year.
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That is much less likely under an inefficient tax system. The income tax, for
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example, is gloriously inefficient. The higher the tax rate, the less people
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work. If the government raised the income-tax rate to 100 percent, we'd all
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stop working, and tax revenue would be zero. To convince us to earn an income
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worth taxing, the government is forced to let us .
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The challenge is to make
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taxes more efficient without making them too easy to raise. This brings
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me back to my proposed constitutional amendment: capping individual taxes and
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tying the cap to the average tax bill. Adding a cap to the current system would
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improve efficiency (there would be no disincentive to earn income beyond a
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certain level), while maintaining the natural safeguards against confiscatory
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government that are built into the income tax. In fact, those safeguards would
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be strengthened by the fact that any tax increase would have to be quite
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broad-based. As a bonus, a cap would bring the income tax closer to being
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equitable, in the true sense of the word. The offsetting disadvantages? None,
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as far as I can see.
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