UTW Summer Brewsurbatulsaclassifiedsbutton
  TULSA METRO'S ONLY INDEPENDENT NEWSWEEKLY
UTW Reader Comments  |  Has Something Made You Mad? Tell Us!    
Home » Columns » OpEd
  RSS XML

Only One Solution

How the IRS can give credit where credit is due


BY TED RALL

A moratorium on housing foreclosures and evictions is a good idea. So is making the tax code more progressive. Obama's plan to build new public works is smart. But those are half-measures. Even if they don't come out of Congress watered down and wankified, they'll come too little and too late to kill the rapidly metastasizing disease that threatens to kill the U.S. economy: income inequality.

Employers are shedding jobs at a breathtaking rate: more than 560,000 per month. The rate of job losses could soon hit a million. People who still have jobs are being squeezed by pay cuts and freezes; even those who have yet to be affected are closing their wallets out of fear that they'll be the next to get chopped. So consumer spending, which accounts for two-thirds of economic activity, is plunging. Moreover, millions of individuals and businesses have lost access to credit and thus the movement of capital that might have pulled us out of this tailspin.

"The key is that the consumer is in the worst condition since the Great Depression," retail consultant Howard Davidowitz told NBC News. Boarded-up shops will abound. Experts expect 73,000 retail locations to close during the first few months of 2009. Between 20 and 40 percent of national retail chains will shut down. This isn't a recession. It's a depression, and it could destroy the country.

If broke consumers are the problem, shoveling money into their pockets is the way to get them spending again. Where do get it? The reason Willie Sutton robbed banks, he supposedly said, was because "that's where the money is." These days, the money is in the hands of corporations and rich individuals. (Warning: boring economic statistics and analysis follow. But stick with me. You could get a check!)

Tax returns give only a partial picture of a nation whose riches have been aggregated in the hands of tiny elite. "The Internal Revenue Service," reported The New York Times in 2007, "captures only about 70 percent of business and investment income, most of which flows to upper-income individuals, because not everybody accurately reports such figures." So actual income inequality is bigger than IRS data indicates.

Even so, the IRS finds a huge pay gap between the very rich and the rest of us.

"The wealthiest one percent of Americans earned 21.2 percent of all income in 2005," the most recent year for which IRS data is available, according to a 2007 piece in The Wall Street Journal.

What if we played Karl Marx and left that one percent of the population (people who earn over $350,000 a year) with their fair share - one percent of national income? If we divided the rest of the loot equally, everyone else - 99 percent - would get a 20.2 percent pay raise.

I don't know about you, but I could use it. And because I'm a patriot, I pledge to fritter away half of my 20.2 percent windfall on wine, women and frivolous American-made consumer goods.

What would happen if we adopted the communist principle of total income equality? That would require closing the gap between median (the halfway mark of income distribution) income and average income. Due to wage inequality, the average worker earns 40 percent more than the median. Close the gap, and two-thirds of Americans get a raise. One-third gets a cut. But only a small group, the top five or ten percent, would feel significantly pinched. Most of the third wouldn't lose much. And everyone would benefit from the increased economic activity that would result from equal income distribution.

Call it trickle-up economics.

Wouldn't socialism remove people's incentive to work hard? Though not a perfect economic model, the Soviet experience seems to disprove the idea that you can't find good CEO help for under a million bucks a year. Soviet physicists, athletes, filmmakers, novelists, composers and other innovators led their fields, yet were rewarded with little more than a medal and a puff piece in Pravda. Mikhail Kalishnikov invented the AK-47, the world's most popular firearm. He was never paid a dime, and never cared.

Here in the U.S., brilliant people become schoolteachers and priests. Salary isn't the biggest motivation for most people.

Let's look at big business income.

After-tax 2007 profits for U.S. corporations totaled $1.8 trillion, up 10 percent since 2001. (Bear in mind: this figure doesn't include CEO salaries, capital reinvestments, and the acquisition price of other corporations.) The effective average corporate tax rate in the U.S. is about 13 percent - one of the lowest in the industrialized world. If we were to double the effective tax rate to 26 percent, the U.S. would remain a tax haven compared to Germany and other major European countries.

Let's say the IRS took that extra 13 percent corporate profits tax and cut a check to the American people. Why not? Without us, the U.S. consumer, these companies wouldn't be in business.

In 2007, every worker in the U.S. would have gotten a check for $12,000. That's a lot of xBoxes, not to mention mortgage payments.

There's plenty of cash left in the U.S. economy. Sooner or later, the tiny minority of corporations and rich individuals who are hoarding our nation's wealth will be forced to share it with the rest of us. The question is when, and how.


Share this article:
 
Google Bookmarks  digg  Del.icio.us  reddit  Yahoo My Web  Newsvine  MySpace 

COMMENTS
3 comments posted for this article
Michael Y.
 1/25/2009 - 9:33am
   Re: Glee3d
   
   Paul Krugman: http://krugman.blogs.nytimes.com/2008/08/18/pity-the-poor-corporations/
   
   "Now, the thing you have to realize about corporate taxes is that the statutory rate — the rate you pay after allowed deductions and all that — means very little. That’s because corporations have lots of potential deductions — and can hire the very best accountants to find them, and lawyers to justify them. So any time you see a table that compares the nasty 35% US rate with other countries, you know you’re being snowed.
   "A much better indicator is the amount of taxes corporations actually pay ... basically the United States looks normal [compared to other countries]. This whole fuss is much ado about nothing — or rather, it’s about the ability of special interests to create a firestorm of publicity over the alleged need to do something that, whaddya know, would improve their bottom line."
Report this comment
Glee3d
 1/21/2009 - 3:00pm
   I think Mr. Rall has his corporate tax facts a bit bollixed up.
   
   Compared to other countries in the world the US Corporate Tax Rate is among the worlds’ highest. Currently, the average combined federal and state corporate tax rate in the U.S. is 39.3 percent, second among OECD countries to Japan's combined rate of 39.5 percent. Lowering the federal rate to 30.5 percent would only lower the U.S.'s ranking to fifth highest among industrialized countries. Additionally, the U.S. is among eight countries with extra corporate tax rates imposed by state or local levels of government. While the burden of these state-level taxes is somewhat lessened because they can be deducted from federal taxes, they do add a second layer of tax and also add considerable complexity for multi-state and multi-national businesses. Also consider the shift in the form of business organization in the United States since 1986 has substantially reduced the amount of business income subject to double taxation. The UK, Italy and Germany have all lowered their combined corporate rates over the last 5 years to try to stay competitive globally; and the USA , just under Japan, is still at the top of the tax heap.
   
   CEO pay packages and corporate tax rates have nothing in common. One is set by the company's board of directors to presumably retain competent executive talent to grow a business and return value to shareholders. If it is considered "excessive" complain to the board’s executive compensation committee members directly, which can be done easily with most public companies, again, assuming you own shares in the companies and have cause to complain. Other than that you are just politicizing jealousy, and creating “class envy”. However, I would get on board with a plan that would cost the executive money in years when they did not add value, or lost worth in a business under their management; sadly that will never happen though.
   
   As to corporate taxes, they are a drag on capital formation, business expansion and a job-killer. The more money sent to government at all levels the less left over to expand business, build new facilities and hire workers. When was the last time you ever saw any government create a good or service that was self-funded, expanded the public good, and terminated when complete?
   
   
   Respectfully yours,
   
   George Lee
Report this comment
toddkreigh
 1/19/2009 - 9:51am
   I love reading Ted Rall's column because it keeps my sinuses clear. The biggest laugher from Rall's last column (and it’s difficult to single out any one statement) was this one buried in the middle:
   
   "Though not a perfect economic model, the Soviet experience seems to disprove the idea that you can't find good CEO help for under a million bucks a year."
   
   No, the “Soviet experience” wasn’t perfect. Not quite. It did manage to export Communism to a good part of the world, murder at least 20 million people (more than that if you believed Solzhenitsyn), destroy the economy, and leave much of Russia with a third-world infrastructure. If it had been any more perfect than it was, Russia would have probably been annexed to Poland by now. Those Soviet CEOs were the best.
   
   It’s nice to know we still have Marxists who can get syndicated.
Report this comment

Post a comment




MORE BY TED RALL
War and Wordplay
Not-so-secret "secret bombings" [May 15, 2013]
Why Closing Guantánamo is Easy
Obama doesn't need Congress, he needs Travelocity [May 8, 2013]
Whys and Wherefores
When you ask "Why?" mean it [May 1, 2013]
My Profile | My Settings

Subscriptions Available at $124/yr.

Please allow 4-6 weeks for processing. No refunds are issued. Back issues are available for $10/copy.

We accept Visa, M/C, checks and money orders. Call to charge by phone 918-592-5550. Enter your contact information in the form below and we will contact you.

If ordering by mail, make checks and money orders payable to Urban Tulsa Weekly. Send your payment along with your complete postal delivery address to Urban Tulsa Weekly, Attn: Samantha, PO Box 50499, Tulsa, OK 74150

Name:
Address:
Address2:
City:
State:
Zip Code:
Email:
Phone:
Comments:

 

Urban Tulsa Weekly
1924 E. 6th St.
Tulsa OK 74104
Phone: (918) 592-5550
Fax: (918) 592-5970
e-mail: Subscriptions

Powered by Gyrosite © Copyright 2013, Urban Tulsa Weekly   RSS