I finished Pat Buchanan's The Great Betrayal: How American Sovereignty and Social Justice Are Being Sacrificed to the Gods of the Global Economy.
In
 my latest reading, Buchanan elaborated on his proposal to have a 
revenue tariff of 15 percent.  Actually, he doesn't believe that the 
tariff should be that low for all imports.  For imports that come from 
countries where workers are paid dramatically less than our workers, 
Buchanan argues, the tariff should be higher.
Buchanan also talks about tax policy.  In
 my latest reading, he treats the national sales tax as a good idea, 
even though he says earlier in the book (on page 295) that "Even a 
national sales tax would require tens of thousands of IRS agents pouring
 over the cash receipts of millions of businesses", which is why 
Buchanan prefers tariffs for raising revenue: with tariffs, the 
government doesn't intervene in Americans' lives, as it simply collects 
the tariffs at the ports. 
Regarding the flat tax, 
Buchanan doesn't want it to allow people who have inherited their wealth
 to avoid paying their taxes, yet he does support a flat tax for 
salaries, wages, capital gains, interest, and dividends above $35,000, 
as that could encourage savings and investment.  Buchanan also supports a
 corporate revenue tax, which seems to be a tax on the corporations' 
gross revenue rather than merely their profits.  Buchanan states on page
 323: "To provide a break for small businesses, which have created 
almost all of the 30 million new jobs since 1981, the corporate revenue 
tax could be raised to 5 percent for large corporations, but the first 
few millions of dollars of [corporate] revenue could be taxed at 0 
percent, 1 percent, or 2 percent."  Buchanan appears to 
recognize the need for a strong middle class here, which (for him) 
entails that the rich pay more.  Yet, he also doesn't want to soak the 
rich.
I found this to be an excellent book.  Reading 
Buchanan has been a mixed experience for me.  I used to love his 
red-meat campaign speeches, especially when I was a conservative, and 
even today I can appreciate his talent as a wordsmith and as an intense 
orator.  Some of his columns and books, however, have struck me as 
overly technical and nuanced----which is good, yet not exactly pleasing 
for me as a reader.  This book, however, was readable and
 informative----not to mention that it was a substantive defense of 
protectionism and critique of the arguments that are often made in favor
 of free trade.  I especially enjoyed his narration of American
 history, which I could tell is a great love of his.  I first heard of 
this book over a decade ago.  I was at a Buchanan rally in 1996, and he 
was saying that he would write a book about the founding fathers and 
protectionism.  I'm glad I finally got around to reading it!
 
 
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