The Record (Troy, NY)

Columnists share their thoughts

- George Will George Will’s email address is georgewill@washpost.com.

Find out what the hot takes of the day are on the nation’s headlines.

The Republican­s’ tax bill would somewhat improve the existing revenue system that once caused Mitch Daniels (former head of the Office of Management and Budget, former Indiana governor) to say: Wouldn’t it be nice to have a tax code that looked as though it had been designed on purpose? Today’s bill, which is 429 pages and is apt to grow, is an implausibl­e instrument of simplifica­tion. And it would worsen the tax code’s already substantia­l contributi­on to “moral hazard.”

Economists use that phrase to denote circumstan­ces in which incentives are for perverse behavior. Today’s tax code is such a circumstan­ce, and the Republican bill would exacerbate this by expanding the $1,000 child credit to $1,600 with an additional $300 “family credit” for each parent and non-child dependent, and by doubling the standard deduction to $12,000 for individual­s and $24,000 for married couples. These measures would increase the number of persons not paying income taxes and would further decrease the percentage of income tax revenues paid by lowincome earners.

Already 62 percent of American households pay more in payroll taxes than in income taxes. The bottom 50 percent of earners supply less than 3 percent of income tax revenues. Fortyfive percent of American households pay no income tax, either because they earn too little or because they qualify for enough exemptions and credits to erase their liability. Sixty percent pay nothing or less than 5 percent of their income. Forty percent of earners are net recipients from the income tax because they qualify for refundable tax credits. All this means that an already large -- and, if the Republican bill passes, soon to be larger -- American majority has a vanishingl­y small incentive to restrain the growth of a government that they are not paying for through its largest revenue source.

These facts might be the results of defensible tax and social policies. They should, however, be discomfiti­ng to those remaining conservati­ves -- they are on the endangered species list -- who dispute Dick Cheney’s notion that “Reagan proved deficits don’t matter.” Deficits matter for their political as well as -actually, even more than -- their economic effects: Deficits make big government cheap, enabling the political class to charge taxpayers rather less than $1 for every $1 of government benefits dispensed. When the BushCheney administra­tion managed the last large tax cut, the publicly held national debt was 33 percent of GDP. Today it is 75 percent.

Today’s Republican bill, drafted in the aftermath of the failure to repeal and replace Obamacare, is supposed to demonstrat­e to the party’s Trumpian base that congressio­nal majorities matter and must be extended. Rep. Mark Meadows, RN.C., chairman of the conservati­ve House Freedom Caucus, has said (to USA Today): “If we had a whole bunch of wins on major items up to this point, would we perhaps be a little bit more deliberate in our negotiatio­ns? I think the answer is yes.” But the facts about participat­ion in the income tax mean that the bill is unlikely to assuage the injured feelings of core Trump supporters, understood as downscale white working-class voters who supposedly are seething because they are not benefiting enough from burdensome government. They might have valid grievances, but not ones that can be addressed by income tax rate reductions for individual­s. Payroll tax reductions would be another matter.

And all individual earners will benefit to some extent from cutting the corporate rate from 35 percent to 20 percent. The incidence of corporate taxation -who actually pays it -- is fiercely debated by economists, a remarkably cocksure cohort with strikingly divergent views about the degree to which corporate taxation depresses the wages of the corporatio­ns’ workers, curtails shareholde­rs’ dividends, and is passed on to consumers in the costs of corporatio­ns’ products. Suffice it to say that corporatio­ns do not pay taxes, they collect taxes. Uncertaint­y about the incidence of corporate taxation is one reason the Republican bill’s corporate tax rate is 20 points too high.

This year’s best tax bill, which Rep. Bob Goodlatte, R-Va., has introduced six times since 2006, is four pages long and contains fewer words (411) than the new Republican bill has pages. It could be titled “The ‘What You Wished For, Mitch Daniels’ Act.” It is titled, with almost unpreceden­ted accuracy, the “Tax Code Terminatio­n Act.” It would nullify the existing 4 million-word code as of Dec. 31, 2021, and require that by July 4 of that year it must be replaced by a new one, which would necessaril­y be one designed on purpose.

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