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<text>
<title>
(Jan. 25, 1993) Money Angles
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
Jan. 25, 1993 Stand and Deliver: Bill Clinton
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
Money Angles, Page 43
What You Can Do for Your President
</hdr>
<body>
<p>By Andrew Tobias
</p>
<p> "Ah, yes," said Abdul, when someone exulted the morning
after Bill Clinton's election. "But now we have to help him."
</p>
<p> Doormen have seen it all, and Abdul, our particularly
excellent doorman, is as wise as they come. So I repeated his
comment to a cynical Wall Streeter I'll call Mac, who replied
cheerfully, "I'll support any sacrifice--so long as it's
someone else's sacrifice."
</p>
<p> He was joking of course (wasn't he?), but it did pretty
well sum up the mess we're in.
</p>
<p> Everyone agrees we have to reduce the deficit (though not
necessarily eliminate it--a healthy, growing enterprise can
borrow a little more each year, if it's borrowing to make
prudent investments). And everyone is certain that it's someone
else's government benefit, not his, that should be eliminated,
someone else's taxes that should be raised. ("I will support any
measure to trim the deficit," Mac continued, warming to his
subject, "so long as it doesn't cost me anything.")
</p>
<p> It's not so much that we're selfish or shortsighted; it
may be more that we believe our neighbors are--and we'll be
damned if we make sacrifices if they don't.
</p>
<p> Clinton's challenge is to spread the pain in a way that's
perceived as fair; and to make it part of a vision that gives
the pain a purpose.
</p>
<p>-- For starters, we need to redouble the effort to trim
government waste, unpleasant as that will be for its
beneficiaries, and to get people off welfare, because without
the feeling that their money is being well spent, taxpayers will
be loath to ante up more of it. If you're part of the waste
being eliminated, do Bill a favor: don't write your Congressman.
If you're a college grad who's welshed on his student loan, do
Bill a favor: pay up.
</p>
<p>-- We've got to stop giving government benefits to people
who don't need them. It's bankrupting us. Social Security was
conceived as a bare-minimum safety net for those who, through
irresponsibility or misfortune, were not able to provide for
their own old age--which typically, back then, lasted only a
few years after retirement. We must always preserve that safety
net. Absolutely. (Privatizing Social Security won't work,
because you'll still have to provide for folks who end up with
nothing.) But to give benefits--partly tax-free, no less*--to people who don't need them? We simply can't afford it. If
you're over 50, perhaps the greatest thing you could do for Bill
Clinton is rip out this page and send it to Lovola Burgess,
president of the American Association of Retired Persons (601
E St., N.W., Washington, D.C. 20049). Otherwise, the minute
Clinton proposes anything that would pinch affluent retirees in
any way, the AARP leadership will squelch it--along with
America's chance to get its house in order.
</p>
<p>-- We need to raise taxes. And the first taxes to raise,
even if it's not good economics (and it may be), are mine.
Because if those of us who earn a lot won't pitch in, why should
anybody else? For someone who makes a million bucks a year to
pay an extra $50,000 in taxes, or someone who earns $200,000 to
pay an extra $5,000--well, when you compare that with life in
Somalia, or even life in America until 1980, when the top
bracket was 70%--it's just not worth crying over. (Adding
higher brackets would also make it easier to justify a much
needed capital-gains break--a 0% tax, but on new investments
in newly issued stock only.)
</p>
<p>-- The other taxes to raise are two voluntary ones:
tobacco and gasoline. In Canada and the United Kingdom the tax
on a pack of cigarettes is more than $3. Here, with state
taxes, it's 50 cents. If we added a buck (still lower than
Germany and about the same as France), we'd raise $20 billion
a year. Anyone who didn't want to pay could switch to one of the
cheaper "generic" brands (only 13% have so far) and save much
of the tax that way; smoke less; or quit. Side benefits: high
prices deter kids from becoming smokers; the more people who
quit, the better their health and the lower America's
health-care costs.
</p>
<p> As for gasoline--which costs about $3.75 per gal.
throughout Europe--Ross Perot was right. Phase in a 50 cents
tax over five years, and you raise $50 billion a year. But it's
voluntary, because, to avoid that tax, one need only drive more
efficiently--moving, five years from now, to a car that gets
28 m.p.g. instead of 20. (Not to mention taking the train,
tuning the engine, or even choosing to live closer to work.)
Side benefits: less pollution and a lower trade deficit.
</p>
<p> Are these sacrifices we're willing to make to fix America?
Drive more efficient cars, switch to generic nicotine, forswear
government aid we don't really need and pay more tax if we're
at the top of the heap?
</p>
<p> Abdul says yes. Mac doubts it. In the end, it's up to you
and Bill.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>