A Great Big Food Garden Tax Break and Stimulus Package |
10 Comments | |
| By Aaron Newton in Green Living | February 11, 2009 | ||
This is a guest post by Ed Bruske. He writes at The Slow Cook. Ed lives in the District of Columbia. A reporter for the Washington Post in a previous life, he now tends his “urban farm” about a mile from the White House in the District of Columbia. Ed believes in self-reliance, growing food close to home and political freedom for the residents of the District of Columbia.
Warning: The following may contain dangerously subversive thoughts. Young children should probably leave the room….
Although I believe in food gardening, I am also convinced that we will only get so far trying to persuade Americans that there is a healthier way to eat, and that growing your own is a big part of the answer. But I also know there’s something else Americans care very much about: money. That’s why I am proposing right here and right now a big fat tax break on kitchen gardens that will not only spur our fellow citizens to start digging up their lawns like crazy, but will fit right in with President Obama’s economic stimulus efforts by getting everyone busy buying seeds and garden tools.
This proposal has the added benefit of creating a perfect opportunity for the kind of political bi-partisanship that Obama has been yearning for. I am certain that Republicans, who have never seen a tax break they didn’t like, will jump at the chance to support one that will provide fresh fruits and vegetables to every man, woman and child in these United States. This is more than a bread and butter issue. This is more than a Mom and apple pie issue. This is a beets and potatoes issue that people of all political stripes can easily sink their teeth into.
Why shouldn’t kitchen gardens get a tax break? We give tax breaks for home offices, which encourages workers to stay off the roads. We give tax breaks for mortgage interest, which encourages people to buy homes. We even give tax credits for children, which quite needlessly encourages couples who otherwise would not get along to have more sex. Written as they are into our federal law, these measures are a form of universally accepted social engineering, designed to create healthier, more productive, more satisfying living conditions for our entire society. So I ask you, what could be healthier, more productive, more satisfying than fruits and vegetables we can grow and harvest right outside our door? In fact, we can easily do without a home office, or our own house, or even more children. But we cannot do without food. Living without food would be hard if not nearly impossible. We should be encouraging people to grow more of it.
There is a deeper, more profound reason to use the federal tax code to promote kitchen gardens. As we all know, Congress has been unable to undo the corporate-government love knot that is responsible for so much of the bad food in this country. By that I mean the way our government uses our tax dollars to subsidize the production of a huge glut of corn and soybeans, which then finds its way via a chemical laboratory in New Jersey into nearly everything you see on supermarket shelves. Obesity, diabetes, hypertension, irritability–there’s a whole litany of unhealthy repercussions from government-supported agribusiness that we needn’t bother to repeat here. Try as it might, Congress hasn’t been able to wrap its arms around this problem. So I say let’s just put that one to the side. Let’s not pull out our hair over it any more. Let’s move on and consider tax breaks for healthy alternative foods, the kind you grow in kitchen gardens.
The reason I think our elected representatives in Washington will go for this idea is, first of all, it will get radical food groups off their backs about the cozy relationship they have with agribusiness. Once these tax breaks are passed, Congress can continue to accept those fat contributions from Monsanto and ConAgra and Archer Daniels Midland and nobody will care. That won’t be where the action is any more. Everybody in the country will be focused on how to take advantage of the new tax breaks. Secondly, these new tax measures will win wide support because they embody two cherished American values: fairness and competition. Tax breaks for kitchen gardens will help level the playing field where growing food is concerned because up to now all the federal subsidies have been going to corn and soybeans. Nobody subsidizes carrots and broccoli. In fact, nobody even pays to advertise carrots and broccoli the way they do, say, Doritos and Pepsi, two products that just happen to contain a lot of corn. Giving tax breaks to people who grow their own collards and tomatoes will inject a fresh new competitive spirit into the business of producing food. With every family in America growing their own food, we can surely expect agribusiness to respond with a more efficacious high-fructose corn syrup, for instance, even a better tasting fry oil.
This is how it would work: If you are just starting your garden, you will be eligible for a federal tax credit on the land you put into production, up to one acre. I think $1 per square foot is a fair rate, which means that virtually every home owner could probably knock $1,000 right off the top of their tax bill. If you don’t pay any federal income taxes, it would mean a $1,000 check from Uncle Sam. Even better, you wouldn’t even have to own your own home. You could claim the credit if you rent, even if you are starting a garden on the roof of your apartment building or just planting basil in some window boxes. Starting your new garden will probably also require some tools and a good deal of labor. My plan provides a further tax credit of $500 for the purchase or rental of appropriate garden tools and any help you might have to pay for. The only catch is, you cannot claim tools that use fossil fuels. This conforms with our previously announced scheme to reduce greenhouse gases wherever possible in the gardening realm. Instead, this is what you do: When you go to Home Depot to buy your garden tools, grab a couple of those immigrant guys who are hanging around looking for work and take them home to help dig the garden. You can claim whatever you pay them on your tax credit form, anything within the $500 limit. Just remember to ask for a receipt.
As you might suspect already, this proposal would be a huge stimulus to employment, and not just for the guys hanging around Home Depot. Millions of gardeners will need their soil tested, which will instantly create jobs at state universities and other testing facilities nationwide. There will be a huge demand for shovels and trowels and watering cans: more jobs by the thousands for a nation hungry for employment in the manufacturing sector. Ditto for those factories that create compost and other soil amendments and are now sitting idle. They will be humming with new work. (Note: no deductions for artificial fertilizers or chemical pesticides. This is a sustainable, strictly organic tax program.) And what about seeds? You will certainly need seeds. My plan envisions a $50 credit for seeds, meaning lots of work for seed collectors.
What if you have never gardened before? Won’t you need some instruction on how to prepare your garden, what to plant, when to plant it? For that I have a very special feature in mind, something that is sure to take thousands of unemployed horticulturists out of bread lines and put them to work. I call it the “Kitchen Garden Corps,” whereby the federal government, as a further stimulus measure, would fund new positions in every single county extension service in the country, people trained and ready to show erstwhile kitchen gardeners how to grow more food and how to cook it for dinner. (And if we need to train the experts first, so much the better. More jobs for trainers.) Additional positions could be created to teach gardening on-line, a boost for the telecommunications and computer industries.
That’s all well and good, you are saying to yourself, but what’s to prevent cheating? What if somebody digs up their lawn but doesn’t plant anything? Do we let garden scofflaws just kick back and collect their checks? I struggled with that one, too. Perhaps we should require some sort of site visit and certification by an extension agent. Or maybe we could require that people claiming the credit provide photos of their garden at appropriate intervals in the growing season. But I think an even better remedy–one that market theorists will like–would be to provide further incentives to grow as much food in the garden as possible, to garden as intensively as soil and local weather conditions permit. Remember what Earl Butz told farmers back in the 70s: “Plant fence row to fence row!” Well, we would be telling home owners to plant from the back of the patio all the way to the wooden fence that separates them from their neighbor on the next street over. The incentive would come in the form of a subsidy check for the produce you grow, very much like the payments the federal government makes to agribusinesses that produce corn that can only be eaten after it’s been subjected to a complicated chemical process. You would be paid by the pound for all the organic eggplants and zucchini and butternut squash you grow. But you would need to weigh everything and keep very precise records. The IRS will print a form for this purpose, much like the one you fill out when you are claiming a profit or loss from the sale of your stocks. (The cost of the scale would be tax deductible, of course.)
In subsequent years, the tax credits that helped you start your garden would turn into tax deductions. Hopefully these incentives would be enough to keep you gardening year after year, producing food for your family and possibly even for the fruit and vegetable co-op you form with your neighbors. By then, there will be an enthusiastic response to the idea of further tax breaks for chickens, goats, rabbits and other small, food-producing animals. The entire nation will be healthier and happier, hooked on fresh, local food. That could mean hard times for traditional supermarkets and fast-food restaurants. But surely they will evolve in this competitive new food environment, perhaps even learning to serve healthy foods themselves. Thanks to these new federal tax measures we will be eating most of our food fresh out of the garden, which could lead to much less disease (less demand, hence lower costs, for health care) and much greater longevity (better days for retirement homes and registered nurses).
Which leads me to wonder: Will I still be gardening when I’m 140 years old?
Beth said,
I would totally vote for this, very well written.
ktb said,
This is the best idea I’ve heard. You need to get out and run with this. Seriously.
Robert Pruitt said,
This is quite an excellent idea. But I do have a few changes in mind before I would go for it.
First of all the tax credits and such are way to loose. If we were to do this then what would stop people from doing what they do now and buy the cheapest hand tools, sprinklers and such? which of course are made in china and a few other countries. But regardless of cost if they aren’t made in America it really wont provide that many American jobs(just transportation and the like). So all tax deductible items and labor have to be American.
And to further spur people into action and to help clean up the mess we have made with all the poisoned food we sell a hefty(40-50%?) tax should be levied against all non-organic food sold in stores. But hold off on the tax for 6 months after most crops are ready to harvest. This will give people a real incentive to actually try when it comes to gardening instead of just getting the money and then basically not trying.
Good crops and The Panic of 1873 « Home Grown Food Network Blog said,
[...] the tax break. Those with no yard could deduct the rental fee for a community garden plot. (more on The Great Big Food Garden Tax Break and Stimulus Package) The more the interest in the scheme the greater the incentive there would be for community [...]
Bourgeois Deviant said,
I love this idea. I truly think its an idea precisely right for our time. Rob Pruitt makes a good point, as well. My only fear would be that as it progressed through the legislative stages, it would somehow get pecked apart or pecked full of holes so much that it would not get passed into law or, if passed, be greatly diminished from its original potency.
It would be important to underscore the agricultural foundations of our country and those like roots of our founding Fathers. It would be a broad stroke in need of a great deal of regional tailoring. Water rights and scarcity is a legitimate concern for a bill like this in much of the country. It would have to be accompanied with some provision for water conservation for the household so as to provide proper irrigation, etc… Like, a tax incentive or deduction for low flow this or that and rain barrel purchases. Regional provisions for native species of plants will come into play too.
Its all so complex, but it certainly can be done. Rather, this is the first time in decades that the political environment would make it even remotely possible. Run with it. Please. For all our sakes.
Uncle B said,
If every favorable American yard is tilled, either by renters or owners, and planted to potatoes, and we make Vodka from them like the Russians do, the “cheap oil” problem can be solved. We can either burn it in our engines or drink it, and not give a damn anyway!
Cait said,
I love this idea, but I agree that there are a few hiccups in the implementation.
For one, a lot of Americans know absolutely nothing about growing food. This would mean that they would hurry down to the garden section at Lowe’s or Home Depot, buy 20 packets of Monsanto-brand seeds and 50 pounds of Miracle Grow, throw it all in the yard and expect a 4 course meal to spring up. There would have to be some kind of education program so that people would know how to do this without excessive chemical runoff and soil erosion.
Nevertheless, I think it could be done, and I would be at the front of the line to sign up for it.
Great idea!
Actually the reason I found this blog in the first place was because I had a similar idea:
What if we left the actual farming to the local growers who know what they are doing and give a tax deduction for every dollar spent on produce purchased at a farmers market? We already have programs that allow the use of food stamps at farmer’s markets–why not incentivise local markets for everyone?
In addition you could give the growers a tax break as an incentive to market their items at local markets. For example, deduct $1000 for each weekly market visited within the same state, or within 150 miles of the farm.
The one problem I see with the consumer’s tax break is that a lot of markets run on a cash-only, no receipt basis. If you were not able to keep careful records then it would be too easy to commit tax fraud.
So the IRS could distribute a form that you could fill out each time you go to a farmer’s market… a sort of write-your-own receipt. You write down the item and the price of the item and then file it with your taxes at the end of each year.
Another option would be to give a per capita spending limit… say $50 per person each week. and then you could get a stamp each time you visit the market. The form with all the stamps could be filed at tax time.
Critiques would be helpful… Anyone?
Chicken Coup said,
As I started to read this I was looking for the humor, then I started to buy in. Its not such a crazy idea after all. Some of the things you would need like shovels, rakes and tillers could be eligible for a higher credit if they are produced in the USA.
Cait’s farmers market idea has some legs too.
Both of these programs would have implementation issues but hey if government can bail out the banks, autos and take over health insurance why not couldn’t they implement tax credits for growing your own food.
Alex Chen said,
Great posting, my brother has always bugged me about selling my garden produce at a farmers market. I don’t have a financial incentive to go sell vegetables and fruits since I make more in my regular day job. I may do it if we get a tax break on my painfull property taxes.
FYI- My father had a 6 hectares with 40k chickens..
Gerald said,
i hope that those Stimulus Package coming from the government would really kick start the Economy. the economic recession has been very bad on my business. ““`