Las Vegas Review-Journal

A tax sop for the wealthy

Yet Democrats rally to protect it

- Mark R. Vincent Las Vegas Virgil L. Swartwood Las Vegas

AGITATING that “the rich” pay their “fair share” to expand government is embedded in progressiv­e DNA. Yet when Republican­s propose to eliminate a generous tax break that benefits the wealthy, Democrats quickly abandon their class-warfare rhetoric.

In the wake of the health-care debacle, the GOP Congress is poised to move on to tax reform. That will almost certainly include limiting or killing a number of popular deductions available to taxpayers who itemize, about 30 percent of all households.

Among tax breaks that Republican­s have in their sights is the deduction for state and local income taxes. The Associated Press reported this week that the average deduction is about $11,800, but the number is much higher in many states. In New York, for instance, the typical break is $21,000. Next in line are filers in Connecticu­t ($18,900), New Jersey ($17,200) and California ($17,100).

The nonpartisa­n Tax Policy Center estimates that eliminatin­g the deduction would raise $1.3 trillion over a decade. Households with earnings of more than $500,000 would bear 40 percent of the burden, the center calculates.

“The deduction is heavily weighted to families with high incomes,” the AP notes. Martin Sullivan, chief economist for Tax Analysts, told the wire service, “It provides massively disproport­ionate deductions to high-tax states controlled by Democrats.”

And there’s the rub. The tax break enables politician­s in big-government, high-tax states — most of which are overwhelmi­ngly Democratic — to disguise the true price of their redistribu­tionist agenda. It encourages a destructiv­e tax-spend-elect philosophy that has driven some municipali­ties — and even a few states — to the brink of fiscal ruin.

Democrats fear that the eliminatio­n of the state and local income tax deduction might inspire taxpayer revolts in states they have long dominated.

Make no mistake: Letting people keep more of their own money is a good thing. But an overly complex tax code stuffed with special-interest loopholes invites corruption and cronyism, eroding public confidence and jeopardizi­ng economic growth. Simplifica­tion promises a fairer, more equitable system of raising government revenue.

In addition, the eliminatio­n of certain tax deductions under most Republican tax proposals would be offset by lower marginal rates for all Americans. “We’re proposing a much simpler code,” said Rep. Kevin Brady, the Texas Republican who chairs the House Ways and Means Committee, “with lower rates where everybody gets help, whether they are paying their state and local taxes or they are putting their kids through college.”

And if that means high-tax, blue enclaves can no longer use the federal tax code to conceal from residents the actual costs of their big-government policies, then so be it.

The views expressed above are those of the Las Vegas Review-journal. All other opinions expressed on the Opinion and Commentary pages are those of the individual artist or author indicated.

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