Articles by or about the
Author
Return
to list of articles
Christian
Science Monitor
Features, Work & Money |
Monday,
April 12, 2004 |
Memo to Candidates:
Let's talk taxes
Stacy A. Teicher
Staff writer of The Christian Science Monitor
Everybody knows about April 15 - the deadline for filing taxes. But
this year, there's another date America's taxpayers should watch out
for: Election Day. While candidates will put out plenty of tax-policy
soundbites between now and Nov. 2, taxpayers deserve deeper answers,
says John O. Fox, a longtime tax lawyer, college teacher, and author
of "10 Tax Questions the Candidates Don't Want You to Ask."
"Taxes cut across all of American life, so before candidates
have ... earned our vote, they ought to tell us where they stand on
a wide range of tax issues," he says in a phone interview from
his home in Amherst, Mass. He sees this exercise as a much neglected
way to probe leaders' values.
Mr. Fox takes a nonpartisan approach, but he's up front about what
he thinks is fair: "People with equal abilities to pay should pay
equally, and people with greater abilities to pay should pay appropriately
more," he says.
About $3 trillion - nearly half of Americans' income income - is shielded
by tax breaks, but the savings are spread out arbitrarily, he says,
and they often don't support the people and social policies the government
claims are priorities.
So next time candidates for Congress or the White House swing into
town, ask them this: Would you be willing to cap deductions on home
mortgages to more modest levels?
Fox has no problem with subsidizing the American dream of homeownership.
But the tax breaks go too far, he argues, benefiting people with two
homes or "McMansions."
With the deduction limit set at $1 million dollars, a high proportion
of the savings go to people who can afford to live comfortably without
the government's help. That leaves fewer resources for a much-touted
goal - helping low-income and middle- class people afford a home.
You've probably heard candidates complain about "marriage penalties"
in taxes. But what about the singles penalty?
When it comes to people struggling to make ends meet, the tax system
gives families much more help than individuals. A married couple with
two children had a poverty threshold of $19,000 in 2003, but didn't
have to start paying taxes until their income exceeded $47,700, assuming
they both work and have childcare expenses ($39,700 if they don't).
Singles, however, had a poverty threshold of $9,600 and had to start
paying taxes at $9,300. Such inconsistencies suggest "Congress
is just not paying attention," Fox says. "Single people have
failed to gather together and scream at them that it's outrageous."
Fox's short book also challenges the logic of Social Security and
Medicare tax rules and disproportionate subsidies for people with top-notch
employer health plans.
Under a simplified system with fewer tax breaks, Fox says, the costs
of what only government can provide would be more reasonably shared.
There would be more funding for health insurance, childcare, education
assistance, and other services for those who need it most.
"We're at a crucial time in our history," Fox says. "These
are great moral dilemmas which candidates simply aren't asking us to
address.... Congress and presidents have refused to make transparent
the way the tax laws work."
He doesn't really expect these issues to be solved, or even fully
discussed, in one campaign cycle. But he hopes more people will see
the link between good citizenship and being informed about tax policies.
"Voters can understand this stuff," he says. "It's not
Greek."
(c) Copyright 2004.
The Christian Science Monitor
|