Obama’s Muddled Approach To Tax Policy
Obama campaign manager turned adviser David Axelrod said some things about The One’s plans for national tax policy today, and I’ll be damned if all the spin and deception didn’t give me a headache:
President-elect Barack Obama’s top adviser said Sunday the new administration will cut taxes for the middle class even though the economy is slumping.
“We feel it’s important that middle class people get some relief now,” Obama adviser David Axelrod told NBC’s “Meet the Press.”
Middle class tax cuts will be part of the new administration’s stimulus plan, Axelrod said. But cuts enacted in 2001 and 2003 will expire.
“It’s something we plainly can’t afford moving forward,” he said. “Whether it expires or we repeal it a little bit early we’ll determine later but it’s going to go. It has to go.”
Axelrod argued that letting tax cuts expire is not the equivalent of a tax increase.
“It’ll just restore some balance,” said Axelrod, saying the two moves will equal a “net tax cut for the American people.”
Just to sum up: We can’t afford the Bush tax cuts so we should let them expire, and that won’t really be a tax hike (even though it means you’ll be paying more in taxes) because Obama says so. Oh, but we can afford “middle class tax cuts.” But those aren’t really so much tax cuts as tax hikes for the small minority of Americans who pay the most in taxes and bribe checks put in the mail by the IRS for the vast majority of Americans who pay little or nothing in federal income taxes so that they’ll go along with the plan.
Confused yet?
Honestly, I can’t tell if Obama and his people are taking this muddled approach to tax policy because they are fundamentally conflicted, confused and inept on the issue or because they’re trying to bamboozle us so that they can ram through big new tax hikes to fund Obama’s big new government spending plans on government make-work programs for the unemployed.
What I don’t understand is why tax relief needs to be so complicated. It’s clear from the fact that Obama and his people are moving their lips to make sounds about tax relief that even they understand that Americans need to be unburdened (even if they don’t actually intend to do any such thing in a meaningful way), so why not effect tax relief by allowing Americans to keep more of their own money in amounts proportional to what each of them pay in?
Would that not be fair? And it would be simple to do policy wise. Simply cut rates paid by each tax bracket by a set percentage.
Of course, that would mean that “the rich” (a/k/a the business owners and entrepreneurs who actually create the jobs) would get bigger dollar amounts back than everyone else, but then they pay the most in taxes. Isn’t that how it should be?



