Once again, my Representative, Dr. Phil Roe, from Tennessee with common sense suggestions:
Tuesday
was Tax Day, the deadline for filing your taxes with the Internal
Revenue Service. Earlier this week, a recent Gallup poll found that 52
percent of Americans say the amount they have to pay in federal income
tax is too high. Still, I believe the president and some Democrats in
Congress seem to think the only way to get our $492 billion budget
deficit under control is to raise taxes.
According to the Tax Foundation, this year’s Tax Freedom Day falls on April 21st,
three days later than last year. This means that 100 percent of the
money earned by American workers during the first 111 days of the year,
from January 1st to April 21st goes toward taxes. I don’t think we should ask anyone to pay more until the government is a better steward of tax dollars.
Washington
doesn’t have a revenue problem-- Washington has a spending problem --
and raising taxes won’t curb our spending addiction. Instead of debating
whether or not we should raise taxes, we should instead focus on
simplifying our tax code by closing loopholes; lowering taxes on
individuals, families and businesses; and making it easier to file. It
takes the average American 13 hours to comply with the tax code. Did you
know that if you were to add the hours spent by every American taxpayer
filing their taxes it would equal roughly 6.1 billion hours each year?
There
is nothing fair about the federal government taking between 30 and 40
percent of your income, especially on top of all the other taxes you pay
– like sales taxes, gas taxes, and state and local taxes. Tax Day is a
timely reminder that instead of increasing taxes, we should reform the
tax code and pass legislation that will help small businesses to grow
and let individuals and families keep more of what they earn.
There
is no shortage of good ideas for tax reform. For instance, we could use
Tennessee as a model for tax reform, which is why I am a cosponsor of
H.R. 25, the Fair Tax Act of 2013. The Fair Tax Act – which eliminates
the income tax, payroll tax and estates tax and replaces it with a
national sales tax – isn't just about taxes; it is about freedom, jobs,
smaller government and the economy. It is about returning power to the
people and finally finding a way to ensure America's economic growth. It
is about reining in the IRS and stripping the federal government of the
opportunity to dig deeper and deeper in the American people's personal
pocketbooks.
We
need to put a stop to the outrageous government spending that has
turned into outrageous government taxing. Congress needs to fix the
broken tax system and allow our workers and families to keep more of
what they earn and save - while giving entrepreneurs and small
businesses incentives to grow. These are the best ways to stimulate the
economy.
No comments:
Post a Comment