The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

We need to free tax code from special interests

- Star Parker She writes for Creators Syndicate.

The objective of the tax bill Republican­s want is noble.

A big tax bill is all it takes to see how perverse and dysfunctio­nal our government has become.

Why are the halls of Congress now crawling with special-interest lobbyists looking for opportunit­ies to carve out some new benefit, or to protect existing special interests in the tax code?

The objective of the tax bill Republican­s want is noble. Make the code more simple, logical and easy to use. The tax code should be an exercise in civic responsibi­lity in which all participat­e to pay for the legitimate functions of government.

But what are those legitimate functions of government? Why when the plate goes around in church do all feel privileged to contribute? And why when government collects our taxes do we want to run and hide?

The answer, of course, is simple. What goes on in Washington is no longer a reflection, in Lincoln’s famous words, of government “of the people, by the people, for the people.” The tax code has become an instrument of government power brokers to extract money from private citizens to finance pet schemes of Washington’s political class.

According to American Enterprise Institute, some 70 percent of the federal budget, about $2.6 trillion, is transfer payments — funds recycled from one set of private citizens to others. Most of federal government spending is not about paying for functions of government, but for social engineerin­g, meddling in our lives.

According to the Tax Foundation, compliance with the U.S. tax code cost $409 billion. Per Giving USA, total private charitable contributi­ons in the U.S. in the same year, 2016, came to $390 billion. We spend more complying with the tax code than what we give in private charity.

The $390 billion in charitable giving comes to about 2 percent of our GDP. The Biblical guideline for charity is the tithe, 10 percent. From this perspectiv­e, Americans sound stingy. Are we? No, I don’t think so.

Much of our charitable spirit is swept up by government.

According to the Congressio­nal Budget Office, federal government spending on welfare and anti-poverty programs in 2016 was $750 billion. If we look at our welfare and anti-poverty spending as government-mandated compassion, it comes out to almost twice what we give in private charity. Or about 4 percent of GDP. Government welfare and anti-poverty spending together with private charity amounts to 6 percent of GDP, getting us closer to the 10 percent.

Suppose Congress had the resolve to lock out the lobbyists and get rid of the complexiti­es and special interest deductions in the tax code? Suppose we simplified it all so there was a simple flat tax that could be filed with a postcard. If that saved half the $400 billion in compliance costs, enough funds would be freed up to the private sector to finance charitable programs two and half times greater than the $80 billion food stamp program.

Bookshelve­s sag with reports and research showing the waste, inefficien­cy and counter-productive­ness of our $750 billion in welfare spending.Americans are compassion­ate and creative givers. Can we really be worse off by letting freedom work?

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