Taxing the Rich, or Thou Shalt Not Kill Thy Neighbor’s Cow, or Does President Obama Know How to Count?
Taxing the Rich
or
Thou Shalt Not Kill Thy Neighbor’s Cow
or
Does President Obama Know How to Count?
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Brainstorming for a title for my article on the merits of “taxing the rich,” I stumbled across an article entitled “Killing Your Neighbor’s Cow: The Defining Sin or Our Times.” The relevancy of this concept to my article was so striking that I borrowed it. I am grateful to Charles Colson of Catholic Exchange for his perceptive article, which is well worth reading. (We’ll get to the cow later. Or scroll down.)
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Outlining the Problem
- The US has a two-pronged financial problem; an annual deficit, and an accumulated debt.
- Obviously we must find solutions to the problem.
- Continued borrowing is destabilizing our international status and our economy.
- Our national debt is 34 times higher than China’s.
- We must stop spending or find a new source of income.
- Political leaders like Wisconsin’s Governor Walker try to reduce spending and are vilified and threatened with recall.
- Political leaders like President Obama try to find new sources of tax income with popular slogans like “tax the rich,” a concept which, not surprisingly, seems to have much public appeal. The concept of dipping into Scrooge McDuck’s seemingly limitless wealth is, on the surface, quite attractive.
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Is “Tax the Rich” a Realistic Solution to the Problem?
Kevin D. Williamson analyzed the possibilities regarding taxing the rich in the United States in his National Review Online Article
Define the goal:
National Debt: 15 trillion ($15,000,000,000,000)
Yearly Deficit: 1.3 trillion ($1,300,000,000,000)
Define the rich:
Definition A: households earning $250,000 ($250K)
Definition B: households earning $1,000,000 ($1 million)
The “Rich” as Those Who Earn $250K Annually
There are 2.2 million households in the US earning more than $250K. To raise enough money to wipe out the annual deficit of 1.3 trillion, each of these households would have to pay $600K per year ( more than twice their entire income). continue reading…