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Sen. John Cornyn: A road map for real bipartisan tax reform
The Dallas Morning News, Published: November 27, 2012
The American people have spoken — and once again, they have given us divided government in Washington.
Divided government means that neither Democrats nor Republicans will
be able to pass legislation along strictly partisan lines. It means that
bipartisan compromise is the only way to avoid further gridlock.
In the past, divided government has yielded some historic results. It
produced landmark tax reform in 1986 and a sweeping overhaul of our
welfare system 10 years later.
Of course, we’ve had divided government since January 2011, and thus
far it has produced legislative stalemates and bitter recriminations.
Why should we expect things to be any different this time around?
Quite simply, I believe there is now a bipartisan recognition that
our current fiscal path is unsustainable. We cannot keep running
trillion-dollar deficits. We cannot keep postponing structural changes
to our largest entitlement programs. And unless we are happy with a tax
code that wastes economic resources, stifles job creation and promotes
crony capitalism, we cannot keep delaying genuine tax reform.
We don’t have to speculate about what bipartisan tax reform might look like.
In 2010, two separate bipartisan commissions recommended lowering the
rates and broadening the base, which is exactly what Congress did in
1986.
Yet before we can implement 1986-style tax reform, we need to prevent
the largest tax increase in American history, which is scheduled to
take effect on New Year’s Day and could easily trigger a new recession.
All that Republicans are asking is to maintain the current rates
until we adopt real bipartisan tax reform. Remember: These are the same
tax rates that President Barack Obama signed into law two years ago.
They are the same tax rates that received 81 votes in the Senate at a
time when U.S. economic growth was much stronger than it is today.
Indeed, if you were worried about the economic impact of a massive tax
hike in 2010, you should be even more worried about it in 2012.
The president says raising tax rates would help solve our long-term
debt problem, but it’s hard to take this argument seriously, for two
reasons.
First: According to the president’s own Treasury Department, the tax
increases he is advocating would generate $85 billion in new revenue
next year. By comparison, the monthly budget deficit in October was
about $120 billion, and the total deficit for fiscal year 2012 was
roughly $1.1 trillion.
In other words, the proposed tax hikes would still leave us with a
trillion-dollar deficit. Meanwhile, they would do significant damage to
our fragile economic recovery.
Simply put: We cannot tax our way back to budget surpluses and
economic prosperity. Without major spending cuts and entitlement
reforms, we will continue running huge deficits, regardless of what we
do on the revenue side.
After all, our unfunded liabilities over the next 75 years total
nearly $100 trillion — that’s trillion, with a T. Those liabilities are
separate from our $16 trillion national debt. In the most recent fiscal
year, the federal government spent about $220 billion on interest
payments alone. Under the president’s latest budget proposal, the annual
cost of debt service would reach $804 billion in 2022, an amount
greater than total U.S. defense spending in 2012.
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