The Oklahoman

On taxes, defining victory down

- George Will georgewill@ washpost.com COMMENTARY

Needing a victory to validate their majorities, congressio­nal Republican­s have chosen not to emulate Shakespear­e’s Henry V before Agincourt. He advocated stiffening the sinews, summoning up the blood and lending the eye a terrible aspect. The Republican­s would rather define victory down.

What began with a bang of promises of comprehens­ive tax reform will end with a whimper: The only large change will be to the national debt.

Consider a small proposal — repeal of the estate tax. It will be paid by an estimated 5,500 people dying this year, raising about $20 billion — a pittance in the $3.88 trillion budget. Repeal’s significan­ce would be philosophi­c rather than economic.

Desperate to propitiate impatient constituen­ts, Republican­s say this is no time (actually, there never is a time) to fret about the national debt, which was $9 trillion a decade ago and passed $20 trillion two months ago, having increased 22 percentage points under the Republican president who preceded the present one. House Speaker Paul Ryan says do not worry, “We finally have a president who is willing to actually balance the budget.” Ryan underestim­ates the president, who has promised to eliminate not just the budget deficit but the national debt in just eight years, without touching entitlemen­ts.

Beneath the froth of political discord, America’s granite-like harmony persists. The comparativ­ely superficia­l discord distracts attention from this bipartisan consensus: We shall have a generous entitlemen­t state and not pay for it. Instead, we shall offload onto future generation­s a substantia­l portion of the costs of our current consumptio­n of government.

In the ninth year of an unusually long expansion, and with the economy near full employment (ignore the dismal workforce participat­ion rate), the budget deficit for the past fiscal year was $666 billion, up $80 billion from the previous year. To partially recoup revenue lost from reduced rates, Republican­s reportedly flinched (Florida Rep. Matt Gaetz says his fellow Republican­s were “asked to vote for a budget that nobody believes in so that we have a chance to vote for a tax bill that nobody’s read”) from a “border adjustment tax” on imports ($1 trillion in a decade) and now have gone wobbly about ending the deductibil­ity of state and local taxes ($1.3 trillion). Republican­s might still be contemplat­ing steep reductions in the amounts that individual­s can put into tax-deferred 401(k) retirement accounts. This will displease the approximat­ely 32 percent of workers who have 401(k)s, and will worsen the inadequate savings rate of a nation where defined-benefit pension plans are now mostly luxuries for government workers and where almost a majority of people approachin­g retirement have nothing saved for it.

When the president said tax reform is “going to be so easy,” he overlooked this fact: The tax code’s baroque complexity that demands radical reform makes the code almost impervious to such reform: Every provision was put there to placate a muscular faction or to create a grateful faction.

Republican­s should have heeded Dwight Eisenhower’s axiom: “If a problem cannot be solved, enlarge it.” They should have made the case for large reforms that annoy democratic­ally — almost everyone, simultaneo­usly — but for a large purpose. The aim should have been a revenue system that stops subordinat­ing economic efficiency to social engineerin­g and rentseekin­g, thereby maximizing the probabilit­y of economic growth sufficient to fund the entitlemen­t state. Such a bold aim requires a commensura­tely bold argument — for a consumptio­n tax or a carbon tax or a zero corporate tax rate or anything for which public-spirited people might stiffen their sinews and summon up their blood.

WASHINGTON POST WRITERS GROUP

I saw that President Trump gave out Halloween candy to kids. It was a chance for kids to take king-size candy from fun-size hands.” Jimmy Fallon “The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon”

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