1. Everyone--I mean, everyone--hates taxes.
2. Everyone--I mean, everyone--loves massive federal pork projects in their districts.
Does anyone detect a contradiction?
We're the most lightly taxed people in the OECD, with the exception of very few countries. I don't worry about taxes much.
OK, I don't have the numbers in front of me but I suspect Europe is not that much higher, especially when you factor in health expenses in the USA. Add in our premiums and and out of pocket expenses and we might be even. Most of Europe has little to no property, inheritance and capital gains tax.
Yes, perhaps, if you add in our premiums, car payments (because we have no public transport to speak of save for a few countries), day care, etc. But these aren't taxes--they are services provided--often poorly--by "free" markets that pay child care workers $8/hr and allow Anthem to jack up premiums while paying their fat cat CEOs big coin. My point is this--in terms of what governments extract from our paychecks, our rates are lower, and we get less in services than other countries. Nothing wrong with that, normatively. The paradox is the incessant b*itching about tax rates from people who get huge tax breaks--those with capital gains (we tax speculation at a lower rate than work), mortgage tax deductions, etc. I know--I take advantage of these deductions, and I do understand that I am fortunate enough to have the means to take advantage of tax breaks--and to hire an accountant to find more.
The point: Americans can either demand even less from their governments, or stop whining about taxes. Pick one. Of course, there's nothing that prevents both from happening right around April 15.
Some sources on relative taxation; not all peer reviewed, some of them pretty weak. But they're the numbers we have, so far.
http://moneycentral.msn.com/content/taxes/p148855.asphttp://www.taxpolicycenter.org/publications/url.cfm?ID=1000976 (Really, I thought of the OECD comparison all by myself!)
If taxes did go up to pay for health care, overall health expenditures may go down, if other countries' experiences can be trusted:
http://assets.opencrs.com/rpts/RL34175_20070917.pdf[I am not not, nor was I ever, an economist, FWIW]