For a country spending several billion dollars a week on two wars, our taxes are actually at a historical low. Most past generations have been willing to pay their fair share of national defense.
But the best way to look at taxes is, perhaps, to look at the lion’s shares in spending. The big ticket items are defense, debt service, medicare, and social security.
It is hard to take a remotely honest look at defense spending and contracting and not conclude that it is a giant, corrupt money pit. We desperately need another Truman commission, and I think that the political battles over forming one are, in of themselves, quite telling (Ike was right).
Debt service is huge problem. We’ve roughly doubled our national debt in under 7 years. The problem isn’t debt, but type of debt. Nations face hurdles, sometimes self made (like the deregulation and enormous oversight failure that led to the current morgage crisis), sometimes not (Pearl Harbor). Other times, like a family buying a house, infrastructure investments make sense.
But when you squander the nation’s credit paying regular expenses, because you want to pretend that slashing taxes on the wealthy, increasing spending at a higher rate than LBJ, waging wars of choice, and substituting coruption and chronyism for oversight and regulation is a coherent fiscal policy (as opposed to wishful thinking and stupidity), you have no liquidity to deal with crisis.
For example, we can’t stimulate the economy to fix the massive drain that the capital market has experienced. Nor can we fix the weak dollar, which gives us zero leverage on bringing down energy prices (assuming that an administration that has directed billions of dollars to energy businesses is even interested in bringing oil prices down).
In other words, by racking up massive debt in better times, we are poorly equipped to handle bad economic times, which have been inevitable since commerce was invented.
Since modern conservatism is more of a cult that a coherent ideology, it is natural to argue that facts and history are irrelevant - “Taxes!!!” But my tax bill has dropped substantially, both in total dollars (6 figure type changes) and as percentage of income from 10 years ago, but there is zero evidence to suggest that anything but massive national debt has been the result.
On the other hand, the same folks decrying programs like Social Security and Medicare spending don’t seem to be able to make the connection that the most likely alternative is no middle class. Let’s face it, all the hand waving and mantra in the world isn’t going to change the fact that if families have to start paying for grandma and grandpa, lots of grand kids aren’t going to college. They’ll be back in the work force. Don’t believe me? Look at child labor statistics from before the New Deal (say, 1930).
There is an old saying in the study of history, that every stupid idea conceived by man is recycled every 50 years or so. I’m starting to think it needs to be revised. It only took a couple of decades for trickle down economics to come back in vogue, and even as we are staggering in the face of the obvious consequences of slashing taxes and regulation while increasing spending, there are still plenty of voices in the public square shouting for us to ‘clap louder…’
I understand why some of my socio economic peers are on the bandwagon, but I am still baffled at how many people are willing to reliably vote directly against their own childrens’ self interest. It probably is just a matter of time and pressure. If you are working hard just to get by and are fearful of the class below you threatening to take it away, you probably don’t have much time and energy to really think through what you are being spoon fed.