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The number one task of US Congress: how to make the rich richer
By Martin McLaughlin
11 August 1999
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The Republican Congress completed work August 4 on a tax bill
which was passed by the House of Representatives and the US Senate
that day, providing for $792 billion in tax cuts, the vast bulk
of it to the wealthiest families in America.
The manner in which the congressional Republican leadership
resolved the differences between the House and Senate versions
of the bill speaks volumes about the social meaning of the tax
cut legislation. Nearly all the gestures to the middle class,
adopted in the Senate in an attempt to win Democratic support,
were scrapped by the House-Senate conference committee.
The result is a bill which more openly favors the wealthy than
any major piece of legislation in recent history, even the Reagan
tax cut of 1981. The original House bill provided 80 percent of
its tax cuts to the richest 20 percent of Americans, while the
Senate bill provided 67 percent. The compromise reached
by the House-Senate conference gives 79 percent of the tax cut
to this richest fifth of the population, while the vast majority
of the people get only pocket change.
The major provisions of the bill include:
* A reduction of 1 percent in the tax rate for each tax bracket
(the lowest bracket falls from 15 percent to 14 percent, the highest
from 39.6 percent to 38.6 percent).
* A cut in the capital gains tax from 20 percent to 18 percent
for high-income individuals, but no cut in the capital gains tax
for corporations.
* The gradual abolition of the inheritance tax on large estatesthose
over $650,000 for an individual, $1 million for a couple.
* A reduction in the so-called marriage penalty, under which
some higher-income married couples pay more filing jointly than
they would filing separately, because their combined incomes put
them in a higher tax bracket. The $100 billion devoted to this
provision, lobbied for heavily by the Christian Coalition and
other fundamentalist groups, will go largely to the upper middle
class.
* Extension of Individual Retirement Accounts, private pension
accounts which receive favorable tax treatment, to those with
incomes of between $100,000 and $200,000 a year. The IRA was introduced
two decades ago as a measure to provide tax relief for struggling
middle income families, but now all but the top 1 percent of taxpayers
can take advantage of it.
* An estimated $100 billion in special tax breaks for specific
industries and groups of industries, including transnational corporations,
the oil industry, timber companies and agribusiness.
According to an analysis prepared by Citizens for Tax Justice,
the top 1 percent of the population, with incomes of $301,000
or more, will receive 41.4 percent of the total tax cut, an average
of $45,835 apiece. The top 10 percent, those making $89,000 a
year or more, will get 68.1 percent of the tax cut, an average
of $7,520 apiece. The bottom 60 percent of the population, all
those with an annual family income of $38,200 or less, will get
8.5 percent of the total tax cut, for an average of $157 apiece.
Triumph for corporate lobbyists
The final days of negotiations between House and Senate Republicans
were surrounded by a frenzy of lobbying by corporate interests,
each vying to insure that their own special provision was included
in the bill. An account August 1 in the New York Times
noted, the latest bills have proved a bonanza for the lobbyists
who clog the corridors outside the House and Senate tax-writing
committees.
The Wall Street Journal reported the successful corporate
lobbying under the gloating headline, Tax Bill Is a Boon
for Corporate America. The August 9 article singled out
a $24 billion tax break for transnational corporations, sought
by a group led by General Motors; a $7.9 billion reduction in
the corporate minimum tax, a measure spearheaded by Champion International;
a $13.1 billion business research tax credit promoted by the computer
and software industries; and a $1.1 billion windfall for companies
which sell weapons overseas, obtained by lobbyists for Lockheed
Martin and other Pentagon contractors.
The American ruling class and upper middle class pay taxes
at a lower rate than their counterparts in most other industrialized
countries, and have enjoyed the most rapid increase in wealth,
both in absolute terms and as a proportion of the total resources
of society.
An August 4 article in the Wall Street Journal which
can hardly be accused of an anti-business biasnoted that
American corporations already pay relatively little in taxes.
Some 40 percent of medium- and large-sized corporations, those
with more than $250 million in assets or $50 million in gross
receipts, paid less than $100,000 apiece in federal taxes in 1995,
the last year for which such figures are available.
The proportion of corporate profits paid out in taxes has fallen
from 41 percent in 1989 to 31 percent in 1998. While boasting
about record profits, many companies have contrived to pay little
or nothing in income taxes. GM, for instance, with $4.61 billion
in 1998 pretax income worldwide, paid only $36 million in US taxes.
The company's pretax income from US operations was $1.23 billion,
making its effective tax rate only 2.9 percent. This compares
to the 15 income tax rate percent rate paid by most auto workers.
When Social Security, Medicare and state and local taxes are included,
the tax rate on workers' income rises to more than 40 percent.
The real nature of big business politics
It is most remarkable, given such figures, that congressional
Republicans have approached the task of cutting taxes for the
wealthy with such fervor. Republican congressmen and senators
alike brazenly defended the tax cuts' disproportionate rewards
for the wealthy, arguing that since the rich paid more taxes,
they should get the lion's share of cuts. E. Clay Shaw, the Florida
congressman who drafted the 1996 legislation cutting off welfare
payments to poor mothers and children, called the tax cut as
near a perfect tax bill as I've seen in my years in Congress.
One factor in the Republican tax cut frenzy is the growing
conviction that the stock market boom and the ascendancy of reaction
in American politics have only a limited future, and that it is
now or never for the right-wing wish list. It is difficult
to explain otherwise how a measure so flagrantly anti-democratic
and anti-popular as the abolition of all taxes on inherited wealth
could become the principal priority of a party which faces an
election campaign next year.
Equally remarkable, as an exposure of big business politics,
is the decision of the Democratic Party to oppose the tax cut,
not because it favors the wealthy, but because it is not fiscally
responsible. Arguing like Republicans of two decades ago,
the Clinton White House and Democratic congressional leaders said
that the bulk of the anticipated budget surplus should be used
to pay off the federal debt.
Clinton reiterated that he would veto the tax cut, but in a
speech to the National Governors Associationmost of whose
members are Republicanshe held out the possibility of a
compromise which would phase in the tax cuts more slowly.
So far to the right has the whole structure of big business
politics moved that there are very few voices within either party
who suggest that even a tiny fraction of the surplus should be
used to meet urgent social needs. The only expansion of social
services proposed by Clinton this yearprescription drug
coverage for Medicare recipientswould be largely financed
by cuts in other programs and user co-pays, not from tax revenues.
While the Democrats and Republicans describe their differences
over tax and budget policies in apocalyptic terms, the reality
is that both parties are committed to tax breaks for the wealthy
and to drastic cuts in social spending. They agree on the direction
of social policy, coming into conflict only over how fast and
how far to go.
In ongoing talks over the budget, which are taking place side-by-side
with the tax bill posturing, both the White House and congressional
Republicans assume substantial increases in military spending
and substantial cuts in all other domestic discretionary spending.
One analysis of the budget plans finds that the White House budget
assumes $200 billion in cuts in domestic social spending over
the next 10 yearsabout 13 percent across the boardwhile
the Republican budget assumes $716 billion in cutsabout
43 percent.
The tax bill itself has as one purpose to force additional
spending cuts. The $792 billion price tag is highly misleading,
since the legislation is filled with clever bookkeeping devices
which introduce various tax breaks but defer their full impact
until after the 10-year accounting period required under congressional
budget rules. The effect is to heavily back-load the bill, with
the $792 billion in cuts between 2000 and 2009, more than tripling
to $2.6 trillion in cuts during the following decade from 2010
to 2019.
The enormous dimensions of the tax cut suggest the long-term
social purpose of the legislation. While enriching the wealthy,
the tax cut would also starve the federal government of the revenues
required to restore any of the cuts in social spending made over
the past two decades, let alone undertake any new initiatives.
Its purpose is to make permanent the destruction of social programs
which has been carried out under Reagan, Bush and Clinton.
See Also:
US Congress nears approval
of $800 billion tax cut for the rich
[30 July 1999]
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