May 20, 2006

Weekend Question 2A: How Many More Great IBD Editorials Like This One Do We Need?

Filed under: Economy, TWUQs, Taxes & Government — TBlumer @ 3:15 pm

Question 2B is here.
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Answer — Investors Business Daily should churn out as many as they possibly can (HT Club for Growth):

Tax Cuts Have Paid Their Own Way
Posted 5/18/2006

Fiscal Policy: Critics of tax cuts argue that lower rates lead to “losses” of revenue. That’s true if nothing happens after taxes are cut. Which, of course, isn’t the case.

The latest volleys in this fight came this week, as President Bush signed into law legislation extending lower rates on capital gains and dividend incomes through 2010.

The president’s move has been all but written off by many — especially in the media — as a sop to rich supporters who will benefit disproportionately from the tax cuts. They argue the cuts will “cost” the federal government more than they bring in, and make the deficits worse. They also contend that “tax cuts for the rich” today will have to be paid off by working Americans and their children and grandchildren tomorrow.

Sadly, this is what passes for economic argument these days — cheap, ad hominem attacks on the rich, with little scrutiny of both the current reality and history.

Let’s start with the deficit.

Believe it or not, it is shrinking. And fast. This has nothing whatever to do with spending restraint. From 2001 to 2006, overall spending is expected to soar 42%, to nearly $2.7 trillion. Yet, despite that whopping gain, the deficit is getting smaller.

Last year, it was $318 billion, or 2.6% of GDP — after the Office of Management and Budget predicted early in the year that it would reach $423 billion, or 3.6% of GDP. The lower figure was derided at the time as a fluke, a cheap political stunt by Bush’s budget magicians.

Well, this year the deficit is falling again — below $300 billion, recent estimates show. For the record, that will be less than 2.5% of GDP — which is below the 25-year average of 2.7%.

How could this be? In a word: growth. The economy took off after the 2003 tax cuts, creating more revenues than even the spendthrifts in Congress imagined.

….. Fact is, tax cuts do “pay for themselves” — by creating strong new incentives to work, produce and invest that make the economy larger and stronger. Data show this conclusively.

In the 11 quarters following the tax cuts, total real GDP grew $1.15 trillion, or more than 11%. In the 11 quarters before that — a period that included a record drop in stock prices and a series of economy-killing interest-rate hikes by the Federal Reserve — GDP expanded just 7.7%, or $728 billion. Tax cuts did the job, very decisively.

Following the tax cuts, revenues soared nearly 21% from 2003 to 2005. In the three years before that they declined 12%.

….. Add a modicum of federal spending restraint, plus a little entitlement reform, and the budget could easily be put back into surplus within a few years. All it would take is some discipline — and a lot less fear-mongering and distortion by the media.

The reason IBD shouldn’t stop with the editorials is because I want this to continue until the budget is balanced:

IBDCBO0305revs

Then we can talk about cutting taxes some more (:–> ! ), as Australia (”cutting marginal tax burden several years running”) and Hong Kong (second item at link) have consistently done, to impressive effect.
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UPDATE: I needed to add this to respond to the claim that the cuts don’t pay for themselves, from the same article:

According to Congressional Budget Office data, the reduction in the cap-gains rate to 15% was expected to cost the federal government some $27 billion in revenues. But it didn’t happen that way.

In fact, as [Trend] Macrolytics’ Donald Luskin recently pointed out, the tax cuts ended up bringing in $26 billion in added revenues — exactly the opposite of what was predicted.

For those keeping score, that’s a $53 billion swing.

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