creators.com opinion web
Liberal Opinion Conservative Opinion
Mona Charen
Mona Charen
25 May 2012
Obama's Education Hypocrisy -- Again

    If you were a child in the District of Columbia school system (51st in state rankings for … Read More.

22 May 2012
Is Your 5-Year-Old Transgender?

A 5-year-old child with large dark eyes, full lips and a button nose stares out from the front page of the … Read More.

17 May 2012
Obama, Barnard and Women

The president dropped by Barnard College (my alma mater) this week to deliver the commencement address. It wasn'… Read More.

The President's Excess Income, and Ours

Share Comment

It is becoming a verbal tic — the tendency on the part of the president to tell wealthy Americans ("people like me" he's always careful to add) that they have made more than enough money and will have to cough up more of it for the government. Speaking for himself on July 11, the president offered that he had "hundreds of thousands of dollars that I don't need."

The president is of course welcome to donate as much of his extra money as he likes to the federal treasury. He knows Timothy Geithner personally and can probably get a guarantee that his check will be cashed without delay. And since the president is so ready to impute unpleasant motives (like greed) to those who oppose tax increases, perhaps we should impute some sort of moral failing to him for not having thus far contributed his spare change to the government.

I can think of many excellent reasons to oppose higher taxes that have nothing to do with greed.

The government is a spigot. Just when you think that spending has passed some sort of gasp-inducing peak, it blows right past it. Some of us thought the half-trillion-dollar deficit at the end of the Bush administration was vertigo-inducing. In just the past two years, President Obama and the Democrats have tripled the deficit and added $3 trillion to the national debt. This added spending, 40 percent of which was borrowed, was advertised as required to create thousands of jobs, kick start an economic recovery, promote "green" energy, "save" thousands of jobs that would otherwise have disappeared and provide long-term unemployment insurance for those out of work.

The stimulus bill succeeded only in the last goal. (Slogan suggestion to the Republican 2012 presidential candidate: "If you want an unemployment check, vote for Obama. If you want a job, vote for ___.")

Arguably, raising taxes to cover this incredibly brainless and wasteful splurge encourages irresponsibility on the part of decision makers. A refusal to raise taxes will force office holders to prioritize spending.

The president may be perfectly confident that the best use of his excess cash is to pay more taxes.

Those who live in the real world may consider the government hopelessly wasteful and inefficient. If the president really wants to get the most bang for his charity buck, he'd be far better advised to donate to the Boys and Girls Clubs of America or the Wounded Warriors Fund than to the IRS.

Even the spending Democrats consider their greatest achievement, Medicare, is grossly wasted. Writing in the Weekly Standard, Jeffrey Anderson recently summarized his Pacific Research Institute study on the costs of Medicare and Medicaid. It's a familiar Democratic refrain that government spending keeps increasing because it is attempting to keep pace with rising health care costs. But that may be backward. As Anderson shows, the costs of these two flagship federal health programs have grown much faster than other health care costs in America.

Since 1970, "health costs apart from Medicare and Medicaid have grown 41 percent per patient in relation to GDP, while Medicare's and Medicaid's costs have grown 89 percent and 91 percent — nearly doubling — as a share of GDP." Anderson mentions one reason for the disparity: "In Medicare, if providers get it right the first time, they get paid once. If it takes them four or five times — at seniors' inconvenience and sometimes at their peril — they get paid four or five times as much."

Further, as Merrill Matthews and Mark Litow argue in The Wall Street Journal, Medicare encourages wasteful behavior. Among similarly situated patients, Medicare utilization is 50 percent higher than private insurance coverage. "When people are insulated from the cost of a desirable product ... they use more." And then there is fraud, which according to GAO estimates, cost taxpayers more than $70 billion in 2010 alone.

Every time the president demands higher taxes, he is resisting reform that could transform our government, our economy and our fiscal predicament. Even the faculty club set from whom he takes advice must realize by now that without substantial new growth, the United States is in real trouble. The president himself agreed in 2009 that "you don't raise taxes in a recession."

We are not technically in a recession. But we are in the kind of sluggish economy that the heavy boot of government creates. Resistance to tax hikes is shorthand for "no to all that."

To find out more about Mona Charen and read features by other Creators Syndicate columnists and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate web page at www.creators.com.

COPYRIGHT 2011 CREATORS.COM


Comments

1 Comments | Post Comment
The federal governments only purpose is to continue it's existence. The government seems to think that it is the duty of the citizens to pay for whatever new project the government comes up with. It's supposed to be the other way around, the government SHOULD be deciding how much it can do with the money it receives, not deciding how much money it needs to do what it wants to do. If the people are unwilling to pay higher taxes, than you CUT government spending. You don't raise taxes, and you certainly DO NOT go around the tax-paying public and borrow money from foreign governments to do what you want to anyway.

The government is behaving like a spoiled little child. The government wants a shiny new toy. When dad says no, it goes begging to mom. When mom says no, it convinces grandma to buy it instead. Government can't take no for an answer, and we, the citizens, can't really do anything about it. Government made it illegal to not pay the taxes the government says we owe. The government decides how much taxes we have to pay. Sure, we can try to elect new politicians, but its not the individuals who are broken, its the whole damn system. We elect new senators, representatives, and presidents all the time, and nothing really changes. As long as the government gets to decide how much taxes it collects, how it spends those taxes, and how much debt it can borrow against, there's no stopping it. I'm not even picking on any particular party here. Bush was republican, Obama is a democrat, both are increasing the deficit. Bush had both a republican and democratic legislature, and neither party did anything to curb the spending. Obama has had a republican legislature, and all they do is say no, they don't seem to offer too many alternatives.

This country needs a revolution, and you don't revolt at the voting booths, you do it in the streets. Stop electing corrupt politicians into a failed governmental system. We need an overhaul, we need to go back to a government, of, by, and for the people. Not a government, of, by, and unto itself.

Comment: #1
Posted by: Nathan H.
Tue Jul 12, 2011 12:28 PM
Already have an account? Log in.
New Account  
Your Name:
Your E-mail:
Your Password:
Confirm Your Password:

Please allow a few minutes for your comment to be posted.

Enter the numbers to the right:  
Creators.com comments policy
More
Mona Charen
May. `12
Su Mo Tu We Th Fr Sa
29 30 1 2 3 4 5
6 7 8 9 10 11 12
13 14 15 16 17 18 19
20 21 22 23 24 25 26
27 28 29 30 31 1 2
About the author About the author
Write the author Write the author
Printer friendly format Printer friendly format
Email to friend Email to friend
View by Month
Author’s Podcast
Roland Martin
Roland S. MartinUpdated 20 Jun 2012
Marc Dion
Marc DionUpdated 28 May 2012
Steve Chapman
Steve ChapmanUpdated 27 May 2012

23 Jun 2009 The Obama Effect?

3 Apr 2009 Wordy

16 Dec 2011 NTSB: the Banning Nannies