FREE WHITEWATER

Applying So-Called Sin Taxes Sensibly

In a recent column at Bloomberg, Amity Shlaes writes that not all sin taxes, taxes on supposedly harmful behaviors, are applied to best revenue-generating effect. Shlaes is author of the excellent The Forgotten Man: A New History of the Great Depression. She finds that Franklin Roosevelt understood the best way to implement a ‘sin’ tax — apply the tax as a formerly forbidden substance was legalized:

Roosevelt and the Democratic Party saw that the nation was weary of Prohibition. So they ignored the moral question altogether, colluding to amend the Constitution and repeal the Volstead Act. The New Dealers then proceeded to tax the heck out of liquor, ignoring those who pointed out that liquor taxes were regressive….

In other words, the New Deal made an honest deal with the people: the public gets to drink, and the government gets a new tax. That agreement would have failed if liquor were already legal. But it wasn’t. Roosevelt knew that Americans would view the shift from no beer to taxed beer as a net improvement and stand, or wobble, behind him.

The revenue rolled in. In 1940, liquor taxes represented 11 percent of all tax revenue. Taken together, tax revenue from liquor and tobacco sales accounted for more federal revenue than the income tax.

Shlaes implicitly contrasts Roosevelt’s practical approach with a sin tax on already-legal behavior like using a tanning bed: since people can use tanning beds now, they view the addition of a tax as a net loss, taking away enjoyment from something they can do presently.

(Shlaes thinks that Pres. Obama could rake in vast amounts of money if he would legalize and then tax marijuana, following Roosevelt’s example. Since people can’t smoke legally now, they’d view the imposition of a tax a small impediment to ready access to marijuana.)

Setting aside Shlaes’s marijuana option, her greater point holds that one taxes for revenue, not for supposed health gains. Roosevelt saw this, and so he supported repeal of the Volstead Act, and used repeal to rake in revenue.

See, Snooki Tanning-Bed Protest Splits Sin From Taxes.

I’m not in the habit of suggesting new streams of federal revenue, and neither is Shlaes, I’d guess. Nonetheless, if one is to collect tax revenue, I’ll concede that it’s practical to avoid taxes as moralizing (over something like tanning beds, cola, or candy). Taxes to restrict a good, or curtail a practice, often prove ineffective at curtailing behavior or bringing in estimated revenue.

It’s simply shrewder to tax a good or behavior one expects to be commonplace and flourishing.

Buildings in Tokyo, Japan and in Whitewater, Wisconsin

There’s an intriguing video on YouTube that records in time-lapse filming the construction of a tower in Tokyo. It’s the Tokyo Sky Tree. The video depicts work over an extended period. (Although the description on YouTube somewhat misstates the timespan of the recording, it’s still fascinating.)



Link:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Lb8MUeZrxbc.

Despite all its beauty, the video invites one to ask: who built this, why, and with what means? For the Tokyo Sky Tree, the builders are a combination of a Japanese railway and several Japanese broadcasters. The tower is designed, among other reasons, to transmit digital signals great distances past other urban buildings.

One could take pictures of a local project in a place like my town of Whitewater, too. The building wouldn’t be as large, but it would still be possible.

And yet…even afterward, the same questions would present themselves as they do for the Tokyo Sky Tree: who built this, why, and with what means?

For a place like Whitewater’s Innovation Center, the answers would be (1) the City of Whitewater and University of Whitewater-Wisconsin, (2) in part to house a publicly-funded anchor tenant, (3) with federal tax dollars and municipal debt.

I could take a picture of the building each week, for the full construction schedule, and the same would be true after each photograph.

It will be multi-million dollar public project when it’s one-quarter completed, one-half completed, two-thirds-completed, and when it’s wholly completed.

There’s no magic behind publicly-funded projects. When one takes ten or eleven million in taxes and public debt, using no money of one’s own, one can expect to find a contractor who’ll build something with it. more >>

Wehner: Republicans Fumble Immigration

It should come as a sharp rebuke to Republicans that at (neo) conservative Commentary one finds a post from Peter Wehner entitled, Republicans Fumble Immigration.

Wehner observes that

When asked about changing the Constitution to bar children of illegal immigrants from becoming U.S. citizens, House Minority Leader John Boehner said, “I think it’s worth considering.”

No it’s not.

I’ve previously laid out my reasons why this is a very bad idea. It’s worth adding that children must turn 21 before they can sponsor their parents for legal residency. It is simply not the magnet that people like Boehner and Sens. Lindsey Graham, John McCain, Jeff Sessions, and Jon Kyl insist. They are manufacturing an argument to create an issue….

Republicans are practicing the politics of symbolism in the worst way possible. They are embracing a policy that doesn’t have any realistic chance of becoming law, that will be unnecessarily divisive and inflammatory, and that, in the long term, will be politically counterproductive.

It is an approach that is, among other things, wholly at odds with the one embraced by the last two Republican presidents to win reelection, George W. Bush and Ronald Reagan (see here).

Why Republicans continue to travel down this road is a mystery to me. This is not what the party of Lincoln should stand for.

It’s a mistake, but there are always a few who think that by following this line, they’ll become heroes. They won’t, but they’ll keep trying, stubbornly sure that this losing tactic will one day succeed.

Wisconsin Center for Investigative Journalism: Rock County Feeling Increasing Ripples from GM Departure

Over at the Wisconsin Center for Investigative Journalism, Sara Jerving writes about nearby Rock County’s economy following the departure of GM from Janesville, Wisconsin. In Rock County Feeling Increasing Ripples from GM Departure,” Jerving describes the impact on the area:

More than a year after GM closed its plant in Janesville after three waves of layoffs affecting 2,800 employees, Rock County is showing increasing signs of distress, exacerbated by the recession:

– Home foreclosures in the county have skyrocketed from 55 homes in 2008 to 421 last year – a nearly eight-fold increase, according to Realty Trac Inc. This year is on pace to be even worse: In the first five months of 2010, 283 homes were repossessed in Rock County.

– The average hourly wage for private sector Janesville employees dropped from $23.27 in 2007 to $18.82 last year, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics.

– Reports of child abuse and neglect – while on the decline elsewhere in the state – rose 30 percent from 2007 to 2009, from 1,205 to 1,568, according to Rock County Child Protective Services.

– Rock County’s unemployment rate is 10.8 percent as of July – one of the worst in Wisconsin. Beloit, the county’s second-largest city, is the hardest-hit in the state with a 16.5 percent jobless rate.

Even worse off are roughly 2,170 people who worked at companies that supplied GM, such as Lear Corp. and Logistics Services Inc., who also lost their jobs but without the benefits GM workers got.

“When GM closed there was a ripple effect across the entire community. Hotels needed less staff, restaurants needed fewer servers, it was an economic multiplier,” said Robert Borremans, executive director of the Southwest Wisconsin Workforce Development Board.

Sobering, all of it.

Daily Bread for Whitewater, Wisconsin: 8-9-10

Good morning,

Today’s forecast for Whitewater calls for a day of thunderstorms, and a high temperature of eighty-seven degrees.

In the City of Whitewater today, there will be a Park & Rec Board meeting today at 4 p.m., a Planning Commission meeting at 6 p.m., and a LIbrary Board meeting at 6:30 p.m.

The Wisconsin Historical Society recalls that on this day in 1973

Milwaukee Pioneer Solomon Juneau Born

On this date Laurent Salomon Juneau was born in Repentigny, Quebec, Canada. Known as the founder of Milwaukee, Juneau was a fur trader with John Jacob Astor’s American Fur Company. He built the first log house in Milwaukee in 1822 and followed with the first frame house in 1824. In October 1833 he formed a partnership with Morgan L. Martin to develop a village on the east side of the Milwaukee River. Juneau was elected commissioner of roads and director of the poor in September 1835. He was also appointed postmaster, a position he held until 1843. In 1837 he began publishing the Milwaukee Sentinel. He was elected first mayor of Milwaukee in 1846. Juneau died on November 14, 1856. [Source: Dictionary of Wisconsin Biography, p.198]


Juneau Park, Milwaukee, WI, photo Wikipedia

Recent Tweets, 8-1 to 8-7

Mass Paperback Publisher Goes All Digital — despite trepidation, other publishers will follow – WSJ.com http://bit.ly/dtdeYr

Blockbuster Application hits the Android Market — Too late! no one cares about Blockbuster anymore http://bit.ly/adTQD7

@IJ: Licensing Gone Wild: Gov’t bureaucrats shutcrying little girl’s lemonade stand. Part of nationwide epidemic: http://iam.ij.org/cZ3pve

RT @reasonmag: What motivates Congress to curb their vacay time? Giving away other people’s money http://ow.ly/2lsfd
August 5, 2010

Bargain-hunters, here’s your chance RT @wsjfree: Michael Jackson Mansion Listed, $10 Million Price Cut http://on.wsj.com/dbI1mT
August 5, 2010

RT @IJ: Should YOUR TWEETS be regulated by government bureaucrats? Amazingly enough, they’re already trying: http://iam.ij.org/9UzfvS Pls RT
August 5, 2010

RT @CatoInstitute: @jchidalgo asks, “Is anyone in Washington paying attention (to the failing war on drugs)?” http://bit.ly/aBzmQ1 #tlot
August 4, 2010

Many officials were knee-deep in spending for tax incremental district in my town Now that it’s failing, no one seems to know what happened
August 4, 2010

Lawns care or the failure of an entire tax incremental district? Easier to see which headline Whitewater WI’s town fathers would prefer
August 4, 2010

RT @reasonmag: Missouri Voters Reject Individual Mandate to Purchase Health Insurance http://ow.ly/2kWoP Overwhelmingly – over 70% reject
August 4, 2010

RT @nothingbutnets: 2.85bil people were at risk of #malaria in ’09, according to a new map showing malaria’s range: http://ow.ly/2l1NS
August 4, 2010

Whitewater WI gets headline on regulations “Weed, tree ordinance toughens” Real story’s about planning failure of TID 4 http://bit.ly/bxP0QU
August 4, 2010

davidgumpert: the real dope on raw food safety numbers, why growing crackdown–I’m interviewed on NPR’s “Here and Now” http://bit.ly/cqPg2e
August 4, 2010

RT @WiStateJournal: State unemployment insurance call centers closed Friday for furlough day http://ow.ly/18qwS2 Government service
August 4, 2010

RT @nothingbutnets: Check out the thousands of life-saving bed nets we’ll be distributing in Senegal w/ @NBA Cares! http://ow.ly/i/30Gv
August 4, 2010

What every town has: good old boy politician who’ll introduce legislation to help friends, settle scores Maybe your town could borrow ours?
August 3, 2010

Small-town conflicts: multiple roles, political-newspaper collusion, buddies & lapdogs on commissions, financial interests, you name it
August 3, 2010

Politician in Whitewater, WI is worried about residents w/ natural lawns? How about worrying about city’s unnaturally high child poverty?
August 3, 2010

Learn a New Language Fast – Wired How-To Wiki http://bit.ly/aAbAwt
August 2, 2010

RT @radleybalko: When Law Enforcement Doesn’t Know the Law. http://reason.com/blog/2010/08/02/new-at-reason-radley-balko-on
August 2, 2010

Beyond Paper Packets for Only a Few — all should be able to read meeting docs online before meeting» FREE WHITEWATER http://bit.ly/bLwlIz
6:22 PM Aug 2nd

iPhone 4 antenna woes “significantly worse” than competition http://bit.ly/dfMeKM
9:01 PM Aug 1st

Morici: Keep all tax cuts Why discourage successful people from keeping wealth in U.S. and creating jobs? http://bit.ly/d9bNJ3
11:59 AM Aug 1st

Spoiler Alert: U.S. Unemployment Is Now Rising, Not Falling http://bit.ly/cB2ocU
10:47 AM Aug 1st

President Obama’s electric car subsidies are snobby and foolish. – By Charles Lane – Slate Magazine http://bit.ly/9LoK1S
7:47 AM Aug 1st

“Trek Bicycle cooperates in cycling investigation” — GazetteXtra

The bicycle maker that sponsors Lance Armstrong’s racing team is cooperating with federal authorities investigating the seven-time Tour de France champion and others in cycling, a company spokesman said Friday.

Investigators requested documents from Trek Bicycle Corp. early in July and company officials complied fully, said Bill Mashek, a spokesman for the Waterloo, Wis.-based company. He declined to say what those documents were. “One of the things investigators are seeking is for us not to comment,” he said.

Likely line of inquiry: Were custom Trek bikes delivered to Armstrong re-sold to fund doping operation?

See, “Trek Bicycle cooperates in cycling investigation” by Latest News — GazetteXtra.

Peggy Noonan: America Is at Risk of Boiling Over – WSJ.com

When the adults of a great nation feel long-term pessimism, it only makes matters worse when those in authority take actions that reveal their detachment from the concerns—even from the essential nature—of their fellow citizens. And it makes those citizens feel powerless.

Inner pessimism and powerlessness: That is a dangerous combination.

I see Noonan’s point, but I feel neither pessimistic nor powerless. America is more capable than any nation on earth, and we will — through wholesale change and reform — bounce back. Quite a few bad practices will be swept away, but so they should be.

These are hard times for millions, but we will yet see better days.

See, Peggy Noonan: America Is at Risk of Boiling Over – WSJ.com.