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Cost of Government Day (COGD)
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Title:
Editorial - We labor too long for the government
Date:
September 1, 2003
Source:
Orange County Register
It's
Labor Day: a holiday that has been set aside to provide a
day of rest for the American worker. Today, most of us will
relax, perhaps spend some time at the beach or barbecue some
steaks. Tuesday morning we'll return to our work, as past
generations did after their Labor Day rest, forced back to
one inevitable reality that most can't escape - the need to
labor for a living.
It's a good day
to reflect on the state of our personal balance sheets.
Congress officially
declared Labor Day a national holiday in 1894. In the later
years of the 19th century, when the industrial revolution
reconstructed American society, and talk of honoring workers
first arose among union organizers, workdays were often much
longer than the current eight-hour standard. Many people worked
very hard for modest "personal profit."
But Samuel Gompers,
founder and president of the American Federation of Labor
in the 19th century, acknowledged the importance of business
profit when he said, "The worst crime against working
people is a company that fails to operate at a profit."
We agree. Workers prosper when businesses do.
Of concern today,
however, is that the average worker's after-tax profit is
being reduced dramatically by taxes. By one measure, each
American worked a total of 193 days this year, or 52 percent
of the year, from Jan. 1 to July 11, simply to pay for the
cost of national, state and local governments. The number
includes all taxes, regulations and government deficits, according
to the advocacy group Americans for Tax Reform. As a national
average, then, 52 percent of what Americans earn, a little
over half the profit of the workday, goes directly to the
government.
Think about that.
Half of all your productive labor is in service to government.
The cost of all
forms of taxation, if one lives in California, is even higher
at 55 percent, according to the chief economist for Americans
for Tax Reform, Daniel Clifton. He told us that Californians
work a hefty 204.3 days per year to pay for their total tax
burden - 11 days beyond the national average. Furthermore,
California ranks near the top, 4th among the states, in overall
taxation costs. Only residents of New York, Massachusetts
and Connecticut pay more out of pocket for their combined
tax burden than Californians do.
Given the tax
burden, consider the amazing creativity and marvelous work
ethic the average American has. On about 48 percent of their
pay - or in the average Californian's case, on about 45 percent
of their pay - workers pursue their own education, pay their
way through life, raise and educate kids, provide for their
retirement and help others by giving to charity. What further
generosity and grace and accomplishments would be possible
from average workers if they were allowed to keep more of
their hard-earned money?
Yet earning a
fair profit could prove even harder for Californians in the
future. Despite a well-publicized deficit of up to $38 billion,
and enough ire from the citizens to impose a recall election,
California legislators still don't get it. Legislation continues
to be pushed that could cost taxpayers millions of dollars
more. Three bills being considered, SB 2, AB 1527 and AB 1528,
would move California closer to a state health-care system.
How can the average
Californian, or American for that matter, stop the money drain?
Try this idea as a strike against government spending:
Take a lesson
from the Orange County bankruptcy imbroglio of 1994-95, when
Orange County citizens refused to approve a county sales-tax
increase to cover the shortfall. The county survived and bounced
back, despite the prophets of doom and gloom, when prudent
business measures were taken and other, no-new-tax solutions
were found. So, also, the state can bounce back, if our funds
are handled correctly. Californians need to encourage their
leaders to fix the deficit and stick to their guns on no new
taxes and regulations - no matter who they choose to govern
the state in the recall election on Oct. 7.
The average citizen's
"profit margin" after taxes isn't good enough. Americans
have learned to live with less and less take-home pay over
the years. This Labor Day we encourage the government to live
on less. America's personal balance sheets deserve a brighter
future
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