[Congressional Record Volume 159, Number 50 (Monday, April 15, 2013)]
[Senate]
[Page S2633]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
TAX DAY
Mrs. FISCHER. I rise today on Tax Day, the deadline for Americans to
file Federal tax returns on their hard-earned income for the 2012 tax
year. Benjamin Franklin famously said the only sure things in life are
death and taxes. Today we Americans live up to that second hard truth,
the day when the taxman comes.
For those of us in Congress, Tax Day serves as an important reminder
of just who is funding all of the government's spending: it is the
American taxpayer. Even as families across America have made tough
decisions and tightened their household budgets, the Federal Government
has gone on a spending spree. The government has posted four straight
trillion-dollar deficits and is growing the national debt, which is
approaching $17 trillion.
In recent years the average annual deficit has skyrocketed to 8.7
percent of our gross domestic product. These deficits should be all the
evidence we need in order we get our fiscal house in order.
I believe, and Nebraskans believe, to generate economic growth we
must first address our Nation's addiction to spending. We need to fix
our broken tax system, and what better time than Tax Day to highlight
this need?
Tax Day is a day to renew our efforts to simplify the tax system and
ease the burden on hard-working Americans. The act of actually filing
taxes is never pleasant, but it also allows Americans the chance to
assess just how much of their income is going toward subsidizing an
ever-growing bureaucracy.
Rather than make it easy for citizens to comply with the income tax
requirements, the Federal Government has held onto an arcane,
convoluted tax system. Many citizens, particularly small business
owners, are forced to hire costly accountants or buy tax software just
to sift through the 3,951,104 words of the Tax Code which, along with
other rules and regulations, fills 73,608 pages of text, all in order
to figure out just how much one owes.
Nebraskans shouldn't need to waste their time or pay for expensive
financial advisers just to fork over more money to Uncle Sam. Americans
collectively spend more than 6 billion hours preparing their tax
returns. Imagine what more could be done if Americans could focus less
time and resources on tax compliance.
According to the National Federation of Independent Businesses, 90
percent of small businesses have given up attempting to comply with the
Tax Code. Instead, they pay a professional tax preparation service.
Through tax reform to make the Tax Code simpler and fairer, these
small businesses could redirect scant resources currently used for tax
compliance to focus more on growth and creating jobs.
I am encouraged, however, by the recent efforts toward much needed
comprehensive tax reform to simplify our Tax Code. Just last week the
chairman of the Finance Committee, Senator Max Baucus, wrote an opinion
piece in the Wall Street Journal with House Ways and Means Committee
chairman Dave Camp highlighting their progress to date in pressing
toward bipartisan tax reform.
President Obama has called for revenue-neutral corporate tax reform
in his fiscal year 2014 budget. Unfortunately, the President's proposal
is contingent on a $1.1 trillion tax increase above and beyond the $1.7
trillion in tax increases the President has already sought and won.
Such a tax hike sends the unmistakable message to every American
taxpayer that the government knows how to spend their money better than
they do. I believe American families know how best to spend their
money, particularly during ongoing times of economic hardship when
everyone is called upon to make tough decisions and to make those tough
decisions about their budgets and about spending.
Revenue-neutral, progrowth tax reform should not only be geared
toward the corporate side of our Tax Code, we should pursue revenue-
neutral tax reforms on the individual side as well which would benefit
American families as well as small businesses that pay those taxes at
the individual level.
Small businesses generate two out of every three new jobs. Ninety-
five percent of businesses, which employ nearly 70 million Americans,
are organized in such a way that earnings are passed through the
enterprise and therefore subject to taxation at the individual
level. Tax day provides us with a needed reminder of how broken our Tax
Code is. We can and should use it as the impetus to pursue progrowth
tax reform. My goal for tax reform is simple--a fairer tax code that
ensures that Nebraskans and our neighbors from across the country can
keep more of the money they work hard to earn while providing for the
core duties and responsibilities of our government.
Mr. President, I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Michigan.
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