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Congress' Tax-Cutting Folly
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Sometimes you find yourself having to say the obvious. So here goes: There
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is no good economic or social motive for the two $792 billion tax cuts just
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passed by the Republican Senate and House of Representatives. The justification
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for the cuts rests upon a misapprehension of the lessons of the 1980s, a
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foolishly optimistic view of the certainty of economic forecasts, a confusion
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of public and private goods, and an almost willful averting of the eyes from
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the realities of the U.S. economy. I know the cuts were dead on arrival. But
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it's still amazing that the Republicans passed them.
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Last things first. Tax cuts, in good Keynesian fashion, stimulate the
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economy. But the economy is already running at or near its productive capacity.
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Bond yields have soared above 6 percent on fears of inflation, and an
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interest-rate hike by the Fed at its August meeting now seems a foregone
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conclusion. In this environment, tax cuts serve only to overheat an already
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racing economy. And increased consumption is hardly what the economy needs. An
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argument can be made that spending on education and infrastructure would help
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boost the economy's productivity in the long run. Certainly spending down the
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debt, reducing government borrowing, would have that effect by encouraging more
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productive uses of capital. It's hard to imagine that a cut in today's hardly
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confiscatory tax rates would do the same, especially when the major
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beneficiaries of both bills would be the wealthy, who have already reaped
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enormous benefits from the boom.
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But perhaps, as we've been told time and again by Bill Archer and Phil
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Gramm, we should trust the people to spend their own money. Of course we
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should. Unlike economist Robert Frank, who's worried that we're buying too many
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Expeditions and Boxsters, I don't really care what particular private goods
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consumers consume. But the people should also be able to spend their money on
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public goods such as public schools, highways, and stealth fighters, and they
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can't do that if the share of the federal budget devoted to discretionary
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spending keeps getting smaller and smaller. No matter how much I'd like to, I
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can't get together with my neighbors and pay for road improvements on the
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Interstate, or invest in NASA. I know the obviousness of this point is
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staggering, but so too is the disingenuousness of the rhetoric surrounding tax
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cuts. The money's going to be spent in one place or another. It's just a
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question of where, not a question of trusting the people or not.
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A centerpiece of both tax cuts is a severe trimming of the capital-gains
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tax, which seems like a very odd decision at a time when short-term investing
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is on the rise and companies are having absolutely no trouble raising capital.
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Here again, the benefits of this cut will flow almost entirely to the
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wealthiest, and will solve a problem that currently does not exist (that is,
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capital scarcity). And although any capital tax distorts capital allocation,
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isn't encouraging long-term investing a distortion that recent events in the
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global economy suggest might not be such a bad thing?
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Most important, it's essential to remember that all of these tax cuts and
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spending plans are predicated on the idea that the CBO or the White House can
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make meaningful predictions about economic growth, tax revenues, and budget
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surpluses 10 or even 15 years out. They can't. The record of economic
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forecasting is an abysmal one, not because the forecasters are stupid or biased
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but because the economy is just too complex to predict with any accuracy. Phil
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Gramm did generously say that if the surpluses don't materialize, Congress
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could just raise taxes to make up the difference. He also said that he had some
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Florida swampland, the Brooklyn Bridge, and a couple of hot Internet IPOs he
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wanted to sell us.
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