Taxation 101

Shall there be an amendment to the Colorado Revised Statutes concerning limits on government charges, and, in connection therewith, reducing vehicle ownership taxes over four years to nominal amounts; ending taxes on vehicle rentals and leases; phasing in over four years a $10,000 vehicle sale price tax exemption; setting total yearly registration, license, and title charges at $10 per vehicle; repealing other specific vehicle charges; lowering the state income tax rate to 4.5% and phasing in a further reduction in the rate to 3.5%; ending state and local taxes and charges, except 911 charges, on telecommunication service customer accounts; and stating that, with certain specified exceptions, any added charges on vehicles and telecommunication service customer accounts shall be tax increases? – Colorado Proposition 101

This November, voters in Colorado will decide whether to reign in Gov. Ritter’s illegal tax increases, thanks to Proposition 101. Prop. 101 is a broad measure that will reverse the recent increases in vehicle fees, lower overall taxation for all Coloradans, restore Colorado’s TABOR provision that requires voter approval for all tax increases, and eliminate a number of nagging fees found on phone bills.

Naturally, statist groups and the local media recoiled at the proposal. It would bankrupt the State (Government that is). It would require the elimination of vast arrays of services, the standard doom and gloom from those who always want more government. No state has failed because of too little government or taxation. The collapse of California, New York, and New Jersey prove that too much government and taxation is the path to ruin. Since voters can always re-raise taxes later, Shout Bits heartily endorses Prop 101.

Still, voters might wonder why Qwest, the local old fashioned phone company, is opposed to the elimination of state telecom taxes and fees. Would Qwest not welcome reducing its customers’ monthly bills? Wouldn’t that free customers to buy more of Qwest’s services? Perhaps this is part of the reason Qwest soon will cease to exist, but Prop. 101 exposes the sleazy co-dependency between big business and big government.

Qwest is regulated by an abusive wing of the Colorado Department of Regulatory Agencies, the PUC. As with many of Qwest’s territories, the Colorado PUC has grown fat by shaking down its subjects, forcing them to provide money losing services in the name of social justice. In particular Prop 101 would repeal a tax that funds the PUC’s requirement that Qwest provide old fashioned phone service to the poor and those who live in the country. In a free market, the price of phone service in the country would be much higher than in the city because there are fewer country folk to share the cost of running wires everywhere. Qwest is concerned that its investment in these high cost phone lines would go to waste if it ceased to get so called Universal Service money from taxation. Better still, Qwest’s competitors pay into the Universal Service Fund. Expect a campaign against Prop. 101 showing people burning to death because Prop. 101 took away the phone that could have called 911.

The problem with this argument is that Universal Service, and the tax everyone must pay to fund it, does nearly nothing to benefit today’s consumers. Universal Service funds cheap phone services to the poor, but nowadays poor people overwhelmingly prefer cell phones for their flexibility and convenience. Poor people already get free cell phones and service for up to a year to help them reestablish themselves. On the other end, Universal Service primarily helps rich country customers. The real farmland countryside is not served by Bell companies like Qwest; the real countryside is served by an army of tiny family owned rural carriers that get huge subsidies from the Feds. Qwest’s version of the countryside is more like Vail or Ted Turner’s ranch. These people are middle to upper class and are perfectly capable of paying their own way without a government handout.

So, why not eliminate a program that gives the poor what they don’t want or need and subsidizes wealthy vacationers? The answer lies in the timeless tango of regulation – codependency. The state PUC is filled with bureaucrats who relish their power, while big companies like Qwest have kowtowed to their PUC masters for so long they can no longer make a valid business decision without government support. A simple proposal to defund this corruption by eliminating a wasteful and regressive tax would bring the cubical walls of this stem winding parasite crashing down. Both big government and big corporations defend the status quo because it supports them at the expense of hapless and often unaware consumers. As always, government is taking from the many to give to the few – in this instance the undeserving few.

Voters should be skeptical of the self-serving cries to keep the status quo of big government, illegal taxes, and cronyism. Vote for Prop. 101 if you live in Colorado. After four years of illegal tax increases and wasteful expansion of government into areas like union mandates and green energy, it is time to give the Government a dose of the reality with which everyone else is already well familiar.

Endless Stimulus

Last week, Washington released the employment news, and it was bad. Nearly all the jobs added in May were from temporary government hires. While unemployment went down by a fraction, it was due to hundreds of thousands of people giving up on finding work. Without the effects of the Census hires, the economy nearly went backward. Naturally, the statists in Washington are promising more stimuli. Washington wants more stimuli on top of Stimulus 1, Stimulus 2 (the jobs bill), TARP, free money for banks, and the union bailout bill. Surely nobody in Washington thinks even more will help.

In reality, stimulus, or deficit spending, is the lifeblood of Washington politics. Overspending is how statists gain and expand their power, and a lingering recession is simply today’s excuse for Washington’s perennial waste and corruption. When times were good, progressives like Pres. Bush (43) passed a socialized prescription medicine law. Rain or shine, Washington is always a growth industry.

With trillions in stimulus, why is the economy not adding jobs? How could stimulus be such a failure? This blog argued that stimulus actually retards growth and job creation by artificially directing resources to unproductive projects. Stimulus is not the only tool Washington uses to retard economic growth. When it comes to ruining the American dream, Pres. Obama has a few more tricks up his sleeve.

Pres. Obama, barring some miracle, will by inaction enact the largest tax increase in human history on January 1, 2011. Capital gains and dividend taxes will nearly double. Income taxes will go up by about five percentage points. With huge new tax bills coming due for small businesses that pay according to the personal tax schedule, money that could go to growing their business will go to Washington. Further, consumers know that their taxes explode next year – a major disincentive to spend or invest.

Obama and Interior Secretary Salazar are putting the squeeze on energy. New domestic offshore oil will have to wait until a new administration writes stronger safety regulations. Meanwhile Brazil will benefit from the jobs and investment that come from oil exploration that could be done in the US. Salazar has not confined his assault on domestic energy production to offshore oil. He has also killed thousands of jobs in the West by denying natural gas and shale oil exploration. Of course drilling in a tiny remote portion of ANWR was always off the table. Regulation and kowtowing to environmental lobbies did not prevent the Gulf spill, but it has needlessly exported jobs and investment.

In the housing sector, Obama has simultaneously paid the middle class up to $8,000 to buy a new house, while telling bankers that if they make a loan they may be powerless to enforce their contractual right to foreclose. While an $8,000 incentive was nice, the main obstacle to home ownership remains the lack of a functioning market in financing. Obama has trotted out numerous plans that essentially prevent banks from foreclosing on unpaid notes. Banks already have powerful incentives to not foreclose, but they must have foreclosure as a last resort or else they cannot clear bad assets and eventually make new loans. Obama is replicating the Japanese ‘lost decade’ of bank malaise by trying to save what sometimes cannot be saved. In normal economies, construction activity accounts for 10% of the US economy, but Obama, Rep. Frank and Sen. Dodd, are killing this sector’s recovery with their meddling.

Perhaps Obama’s greatest blow to job creation has been his unpopular socialized medicine law. Not even experts have a clue how the 2,600 pages of Obamacare will be implemented. While everyone knows it will be expensive, no reasonable projection yet exists. Will private sector healthcare costs rise to the level of union or government plans? Will the cost effective HSA based plans be effectively outlawed, doubling or tripling their sponsor’s costs? Quite probably healthcare costs will be unrecognizably higher when Obamacare fully takes effect. With unknowable mandates being forced onto even small employers, job creation will be clouded for years to come. While Obama, Speaker Pelosi, and Majority Leader Reid used vagueness and obfuscation to pass socialized medicine, that very tactic is killing job creation.

The lingering jobs recession is a creation of Washington. Without multiple stimuli, heavy anti-industrial regulation, and expanded socialism, the jobs market would have long ago corrected itself. How many years of economic stagnation and European levels of unemployment will it take to prove that Washington is solely to blame for the US’s jobs problem? The best medicine is no stimulus, less regulation, and especially the repeal of Obamacare. Another stimulus at this point means more pain for Americans who would like to work but cannot.