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Show Me the Numbers
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The 2000 presidential campaign has already begun--a
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little early for my taste. The speech writers are busily at work spinning out
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their anodyne alliterations, their balanced bromides, their cautious clarion
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calls. They have already produced for George W. Bush "Compassionate
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Conservatism" and "Prosperity with a Purpose." Al Gore seems to be ditching
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"Reinventing Government," "Inventing the Internet," "Global Warming," "The
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Third Way," and all those other nerdy notions. He is aiming directly at the
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soft American heart by offering himself as the "Friend of the Family."
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With the change of a few words, George W.'s
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compassionate conservatisms could have been delivered by Bill Clinton or Al
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Gore. And Gore's qualification to be America's Friend of the Family is that he
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isn't Bill Clinton--a qualification he shares with quite a few other
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people.
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After a while, the
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campaign will embrace the "specifics." There will be speeches or position
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papers about education, the environment, the budget, and other issues conveying
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information about the candidates' intentions. But it will still be in the
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domain of advertising--full of "new and improved!" claims, like the ones you
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find on cereal boxes.
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I had direct experience with this process during Richard
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Nixon's 1968 presidential campaign. Nixon had two teams of policy advisers. One
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team accompanied him on the campaign and advised him about what to say to get
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elected. The other team, on which I served, stayed home and wrote papers about
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how he should govern after he got elected. The two teams did not communicate
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with each other, fearing, I suppose, diversion from their two different
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objectives.
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I don't complain much
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about this deviousness and evasiveness, and I don't expect it to change. I have
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only a modest request. Before the campaign concludes, I would like to see more
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attention to the numbers. Many of the policy issues confronting us hinge on
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quantities--on how much. Whether a condition is a problem requiring government
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remedies depends on how much of the condition there is. And whether a proposed
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policy is worth its cost or is likely to be effective also depends on its
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size.
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One number we already hear relates to taxation. The number
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is zero--no new taxes. At some point we will get another number--a percentage
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by which the candidate proposes to cut income tax rates. That is supposed to
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tell the voter how much better off he will be if the candidate is elected. For
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that purpose, obviously, the bigger the number the better. But the tax numbers
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need to be seen in national and historical perspective. From the national
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standpoint, lower taxes are not necessarily better than higher ones. In the
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past 40 years, federal taxes as a percentage of Gross Domestic Product have
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been 18.8 percent of GDP plus or minus 1.8 percentage points. (Surprisingly,
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the low point came in the Johnson administration, not the Reagan
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administration.) The candidates should tell us where, inside or outside that
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range, they would want federal tax receipts to be. That would give us some clue
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to the national economic significance of the difference between them.
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The tax question
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immediately raises the question of the budget surplus. For decades we had a
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rule for the proper relationship between government expenditures and
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revenues--or we pretended to have a rule. The rule was that the budget should
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be in balance, meaning no deficit. But we are beyond that now. We have in
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prospect some years in which, with existing policies, there will be a surplus,
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and there is a question about how big that surplus should be. That is a
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question neither the president nor the congressional Republicans want to face.
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In his recent budget, the president tried to conceal the fact that there was a
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surplus, and the Republicans, with their talk about a "lockbox" for Social
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Security, have confused everyone, probably including themselves. But the
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subject is important, and the candidates should tell us how much, if any,
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surplus they would plan to have.
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As long as the country continues to bask in prosperity,
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there will be no debate about general economic policy during this campaign.
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Everyone will agree on the most important requirement for sustaining
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prosperity, which is to keep Alan Greenspan healthy. So, candidates are likely
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to focus, as George W. has already done, on those who do not share in the
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general prosperity--those who have been left behind. But there are hard
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quantitative questions about this. How many are left behind? Is it a major
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problem? We have official estimates of the proportion of the population who are
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in poverty. It is something like 13 percent and has been near that for the past
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20 years. But there are other estimates--equally plausible, which may not be
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very plausible at all--saying that the poverty rate has been falling sharply
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and is now about 1 percent or 2 percent. Which of these estimates you believe
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makes a big difference to the priority you give to this problem. So, if the
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candidates are going to make a big issue about helping those who are falling
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behind, I would like to hear their views about how many there are.
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I give examples only from
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areas of policy with which I have some familiarity. But one can also see the
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value of quantification in many other areas: health care, education, the
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environment, and others.
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Asking political candidates to quantify their stands may
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seem unrealistic because they don't want to pin themselves down and because the
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audience will tune out. But there have been cases where the candidate gave us
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relevant numbers--and with success. I think particularly of the 1980 Reagan
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campaign. Serious questions were being raised about whether the policies he was
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proposing for taxes, expenditures, and the deficit added up. He then made a
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speech in September 1980 in which he laid out the quantities involved and the
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underlying assumptions. Some people, including me, criticized parts of the
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story. But I think it helped to support the idea that he knew what he was
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doing. In a limited way, the Reagan speech served as guidance for his policies
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after he came into office. So, I don't think the request for more numbers is
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simply the idiosyncrasy of an old economist.
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