Monday, July 28, 2008

An Inconvenient Tax

Paul Caron:
Life Is My Movie Entertainment Co. is at work on a documentary film, An Inconvenient Tax. Here is the synopsis:

Ask any of the millions of tax paying Americans on April 15th if the current tax system has problems and you'll get a clear answer. Complexity, inequities and international pressures top the ever-growing list of concerns. The last major tax reform in the United States occurred in 1986. Since this bipartisan effort to simplify the tax code, over 16,000 changes have been made, creating an inflating bubble of complexity that is ready to pop. This looming issue coupled with the expiration of the Bush Tax cuts in 2010 have economists, congressmen and concerned Americans scrambling to figure out a direction for immediate reform

Should Congress try to repair the tax code's inequities by moving towards a broader based income tax similar to that of 1986 or should it pursue a consumption-based system such as a flat tax, VAT or national retail sales tax? Also, can America's schizophrenic desires for lower taxes and increased social programs be reconciled?

An Inconvenient Tax explores the answers to these questions and more through interviews with world renowned economists, U.S. congressmen and average citizens across the nation. The pursuit of a better tax code requires a search for the nations identity. As Joseph Schumpeter wrote, "The spirit of a people, its cultural level, its social structure, the deeds its policy may prepare - all of this and more is written in its fiscal history..."

In order to shed light on America's current tax dilemmas, the film will look at the history of taxation in America as well as current tax-systems in other parts of the world. It will also follow a middle-class small business owner as he tries to pursue the American dream. As every aspect of his life is touched by the effects of taxation, the film will pose both the benefits and dangers of change. The next direction for U.S. tax policy will be decided soon, and it is imperative that the country learn from its past and design a system that will benefit its future.

The filmakers have assembled a distinguished group of almost two dozen interviewees for the film, Including Tax Profs Michael Graetz (Columbia) and Dan Shaviro (NYU).


1 comment:

thinking said...

The key indeed is reconciling the "desires for lower taxes and increased social programs."

There needs to be an intelligent discussion of the economic tradeoffs...indeed, that is largely what economics is...balancing multiple factors and tradeoffs to achieve optimal results.

But the political environment never allows for that. If one politician suggests raising taxes to pay for desired programs, he is crucified by the other side. The same goes in the opposite direction: let someone suggest cutting a well entrenched social program and they will be met with scorn.

So we end up in this stalemate whereby politicians usually only address one side of the balance sheet or the other, and hope voters do not notice.

Of course when the consequences are felt then people notice.