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Wednesday, January 14, 2009

Geithner's tax difficulties

I find myself agreeing with Harry Reid on this one that Tim Geithner's nonpayment of his Social Security and Medicare taxes while he worked at the IMF should not derail his nomination. It sounds like an honest mistake and no real effort to evade his taxes. He paid them up and paid the fine and that's that. Of course, it's an embarrassment that the guy tasked with rescuing our economy didn't understand his own tax obligations. But embarrassment shouldn't be disqualifying. It is time we got beyond the idea that anyone confirmed to work in the Executive Branch has to have been lily pure in order to be confirmed. Otherwise, we'll soon run out of qualified people to serve in our government.

But hey, the guy tasked with writing the tax legislation as Chair of the House Ways and Means Committee, Charlie Rangel, also seems to have problems paying his taxes. And then there is the newest Senator from Illinois, who didn't pay back over a million dollars from a 2002 "loan" for a failed political campaign. As a commenter on my page pointed out, I wonder if he paid taxes on that "loan."

Perhaps this is an indication that our tax code is just too complicated if our highest officials in the land can't figure out what they need to pay. They could pay attention to a recommendation from Sam Dealey at US News that the tax code is not only too complicated but is interfering with our national productivity. Citing statistics from the Nina Olson, the national taxpayer advocate at the IRS, he points out that
* Americans spend 7.6 billion hours annually trying to figure out their federal taxes. Working eight-hour days, five days a week, 50 weeks a year, that's the equivalent of 3.8 million full-time workers.
* At the average hourly wage of $27.54, that tax-preparation time amounts to $193 billion, or 14 percent of aggregate income tax receipts.
* A staggering 60 percent of individual taxpayers are so bewildered by the tax code that they hire outside preparers. An additional 22 percent buy computer software.

The bottom line: Paring the tax code's 3.7 million words to something comprehensible would effectively return money to the taxpayer at no "cost" to the government. Individual taxpayers could do something else with their time, the small-business owner could concentrate on creating income, and the IRS (and, consequently, the taxpayer again) could spend less money on compliance and enforcement. Heck, taken all together, tax receipts from a simplified tax system might actually rise.
Maybe Tim Geithner and Charlie Rangel might find common ground on a simpler tax code.

2 comments:

bruce said...

Everyone that has a finance background knows that you have to pay ss and medicare taxes on wages. And, you can't miss that they have not been deducted on your paychecks.
If it is an "honest mistake", then you have to conclude that this guy is just not that sharp. Certainly not sharp enough to be treasury secretary. We don't have to make a big rhetorical stink about it,(like democrats most certainly would) just quietly tell obama to get someone that is smarter than this, because we won't support him.

Bachbone said...

Even CNN, which is no friend of conservatives, reported last night (Lou Dobbs Show) that the IMF sends many reminders about paying taxes, so the "I forgot" excuse is rather questionable at best.

However, if the "We absolutely must have Geithner, because he's the only man who can do the job!" some Democrats are floating is true, the country is in much worse condition than a mere financial crisis. First, Democrats tout Obama as our savior, and now we're to believe Geithner is his and Paulson's disciple Timothy?