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Subject:                [Mises Daily] Feminists for Taxes
Date sent:              Fri, 1 Jun 2001 11:06:03 -0500

http://www.mises.org/fullstory.asp?control=692

Feminists for Taxes

By Karen De Coster

[Posted May 31, 2001]

Patricia Ireland and her National Organization for Women have released a statement
attacking the Bush budget and tax-cut plan. She points to deficiencies in tax
revenue
and spending by virtue of accusing Bush of "pushing budget and tax cuts that will
hurt women's physical and economic health as well as the safety of women and
families."

No, George Bush is not personally injecting all women with the Ebola virus, nor is he
drafting them into involuntary servitude, chasing down coffee and donuts for men.
Ireland is simply lamenting the fact that the Bush budget plan does not include the
desired amount of welfare for women.

The Bush budget and tax cut are far from perfect, but Ireland's latest claim
essentially says that the new budget and tax-cut plan is good for all men, and bad
for all women and their children.

How can that be? How is it possible that Bush has managed to exclude women from a $1
trillion-plus tax cut?

Effectively, the president's agenda for tax relief aims at replacing the current tax
rates with a simpler and lower rate structure; doubling the child tax credit;
reducing the marriage penalty; eliminating the death tax; and expanding the
charitable deduction to those who don't itemize their deductions. Ireland's claim is
that most women are employed in low-wage sectors, and that the lower income brackets
are least likely to gain from the tax cuts. Hence, women lose out.

However, the lowest income bracket will see a reduction in tax rates from 15 percent
to 10 percent for the first $6,000 for singles and the first $10,000 for those filing
head of household-both categories typically including the women that Ms. Ireland
speaks of. The next income bracket upward would get a 3-percent reduction in tax for
the first $38,500 in that bracket and a 6-percent reduction for the next $71,200 on
top of that for single filers; for those filing head of household, a 3-percent
reduction in tax for the first $57,400, and a 6-percent reduction for the next
$58,000.

Of course, Ireland's emotionally-laden press release does not expound on how and why
tax cuts hurt women. She only maintains that "right-wing extremism" is inherently
dangerous to women, economically and socially.

According to Ireland, the Bush Social Security Trust Fund Plan that would allow
workers to pull a small percentage of their current payroll tax out of Social
Security would spell doom for older women, and would find them paying the price for
the Bush tax cuts and budget proposal. Here, Ms. Ireland finds it despicable that
working individuals should be allowed to have a tiny bit more say in how their money
is used instead of having the government decide where and when it should be spent.
What Ms. Ireland really means is that privatizing a small portion of Social Security
would mean there would be less currency to fall into the general-fund pot for further
welfare spending on women's causes.

The Bush budget, though loaded with spending and handouts, is not good enough for the
civic-minded Ms. Ireland.

"Bush's budget," says Ireland's release, "would cut breast- and cervical-cancer
screening; drop the requirement for contraceptive coverage for federal employees and
their families; cut the Maternal and Child Health Block Grants that provide health
care to women before, during, and after pregnancy and childbirth and reduce infant
illness and death; and freeze the Healthy Start program that also reduces infant
mortality and morbidity. The highly acclaimed Supplemental Nutrition Program for
Women, Infants and Children (the WIC Program) would be effectively cut, with actual
funds available insufficient to cover inflation."

This puts me in tears. How dare we expect people to take care of themselves, their
health, and to have babies only when they can afford the care and maintenance that
childbearing requires? After all, this would mean we expect personal responsibility
and accountability for one's own actions. That's too preposterous a notion for
Ireland's collectivist bunch.

The feminist posture is typically one of taking from men's health programs
(testicular cancer, prostrate cancer, etc.) and handing off the dough to the
breast-and-cervical crowd. Still and all, disease is disease. Spending other people's
money on the basis of gender specificity involves partaking in interest-group cabals
that deprive one group of people in order to promote another group. It's all trivial
when we consider that no one should be taking anyone's money to spend anywhere else.
This is something vigilant money-grabbers, like the feminists, cannot ever conceive
of.

Ireland also takes up arms over President Bush's plan for funding education. She
states, "The man who would be our 'education president,' Bush wants to cut all of the
funding for Reading is FUNdamental, an effective program championed by both his wife
and his mother."

How this can be a feminist issue is unclear. The truth is that, under Bush's budget,
publicly financed education and reading programs see huge gains, and the Department
of Education would see a funding increase of $4.6 billion, however that is to be
spent.

Other of Ireland's educational pet projects that she fears will get the axe involve
child-abuse prevention, after-school babysitting, and school counseling-rubbish
programs that take from the productive to fulfill the wants of the nonproductive and
displace private alternatives.

The feminist notion clearly defies itself in terms of economic opportunity. The
feminists extol women as having the intelligence and competitive means to secure
careers and financial independence outside of that provided by a man; but in
contrast, each time the expanding dole is budgeting its handouts, people like those
in the NOW crowd are demanding a larger portion of the subsidy pot.

The reality is this: We are in the midst of a slowing economy that is overburdened
with taxation, regulation, and expanding executive budgets. Bush's plan does nothing
to keep the government in check. The good in Bush's plan, however, is that it
proposes a lesser hardship on the working person than any existing alternative. Any
time we can procure a tax cut or a true spending cut, we have made a small piece of
progress toward economic freedom, for men and women alike.

-------------




Karen De Coster, who lives in Michigan, is a business professional, freelance writer,
and graduate student in economics. Send her mail and see her daily article archive.



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