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Cost of Government Day (COGD)
[2005] [2004] [2003] [2002] [2001]
Title:
Government Costs More Than You Think
Date:
July 10, 2003
Source:
David Strom, Taxpayers League of Minnesota
Words:
583
Everybody
knows we pay too much in taxes.
Grumbling about the cost of government is as normal a part
of life as complaining about the weatherthe difference
being that if you grumble enough, maybe you can change the
level of your taxes, but you havent much chance of improving
the weather!
But have you ever
really thought much about what government really costs you?
I dont mean
just in taxeswe can all give a decent guess how much
we pay in income or sales taxes. No, I mean how much it costs
to deal with all the rules, regulation, bureaucracy and paperwork
government imposes on us, our employers, and people we do
business with every day.
Think of itjust
to comply with the current tax code Americans spend millions
of hours and billions of dollars to ensure that they are complying
with the over 17,000 pages of tax regulations the government
imposes on us. So not only do citizens pay the taxesthey
are forced to become unpaid accountants for the government.
And thats
just one small way that government costs us more that it seems
at first.
In fact, according
to Americans for Tax Reform, a Washington-based taxpayer advocacy
organization, the amount you pay in taxes to the government
accounts for only about two-thirds of the REAL cost of government.
When you add up all the hidden costs of governmentthe
rules, regulations, the hours of frustrating paperwork that
government imposes on everyday Americans, the added costs
to each of us are staggering.
What does that
mean in real terms? It sometimes seems impossible to get a
handle on anything as big and confusing as the cost of government.
But Americans for Tax Reform has hit upon a pretty easy way
to understand the issue: if you add up all the time you work
to pay your tax bill, and then add up all the time it takes
to pay the expense of government rules and regulations, you
can figure out the number of workdays it takes to pay off
your bill to the government.
And guess what:
the average American works 193 days a year to pay the cost
of government!
If you paid it
all at once, as opposed to throughout the year, it would take
all the income you make from the 1st of January to the 11th
of July just to pay the cost of government.
On July 12th, you
can start working for your family! What a relief!
Now of course nobody
actually pays that bill all at oncebut in a way, thats
the point of cost of government day. We sometimes
forget that that there is a real cost to all that government
we have gotten used toand that it just makes sense to
say no to government expansion.
Why is that so
important? Well consider this: just since 2000, the cost of
government has increased by 8% for the average American. Now
of course some of that is simply paying for the war on terror,
and none of us can quarrel with that. But frankly, some it
is just plain government expansion.
How much government
can we afford? Who knows? Maybe the better question is how
much time do you want to spend working just to pay the governments
bills instead of your familys?
All in all, 193
days working for the government seems pretty expensive to
me.
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David Strom is
Legislative Director of the Taxpayers League of Minnesota.
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