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Obama Pursues Higher Tax Rates, Growth Be Damned

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In the run-up to this weekend's G-8 summit at Camp David, journalists have unfavorably compared European "austerity" with Barack Obama's economic policies.

European spending cuts, the argument goes, have hurt people and are arousing political opposition, while Obama's proposals to keep federal spending at 24 percent of gross domestic product indefinitely are likely to succeed.

Evil Republican spending cuts, in contrast, would deny the economy needed stimulus and wreak havoc on ordinary people.

But the facts undermine the storyline. Veronique de Rugy of the Mercatus Center at George Mason University took a look at what "austerity" in Europe actually means.

What she found is that government spending has increased or not appreciably declined in Britain, France, Italy, Spain and Germany. The only significant spending reductions are in Greece, where the bond market cut off funding.

In the other countries, the big adjustment has been an increase in tax rates. European "austerity" is an attempt to reduce government budget deficits largely by increasing taxes and only to a small extent by reining in spending.

Which, when you come to think about it, is the policy not of House Republicans — who actually passed a budget — but of Barack Obama.

Over the past three years, Obama has pursued the goal of higher tax rates as relentlessly as Captain Ahab pursued the great white whale.

Never mind that by some measures the United States, even with the "Bush tax cuts," already has the most progressive tax system in advanced economies. About 40 percent of federal income tax revenues come from the top 1 percent.

And we know from experience that when top rates are increased above Bill Clinton's 39.6 percent, the intake is always less than projected. Since World War II, federal revenues have never risen much over 20 percent of gross domestic product, whether the top rate was 28 percent or 91 percent.

The reason is that when rates get high enough, investors' animal spirits (John Maynard Keynes' term) are directed less at increasing productivity and creating wealth and more at avoiding taxes. And without increased productivity, you don't get robust economic growth — which hurts everyone.

There's another problem.

High tax rates mean a volatile revenue stream, as California Gov. Jerry Brown is finding out. When times are bad, revenues dry up just when government needs money. California's budget deficit has zoomed from $9 billion to $16 billion in a few months.

Barack Obama doesn't seem to care about these things. In the 2008 campaign, ABC News' Charlie Gibson asked him whether he would increase the capital gains tax rate even if it meant reducing government revenue, as has happened in the past.

Yes, Obama said, "for purposes of fairness." He wants to take away money from people who have earned it even if government gets less to spend.

Obama argues that government spending can generate growth. But money spent propping up state and local public employee unions and funding supposedly shovel-ready projects — major features of his 2009 stimulus package — didn't do much for the economy.

In contrast, Obama's former chief economist Christina Romer and her husband David Romer, in a 2010 academic paper, wrote that "exogenous" tax increases, like letting the "Bush tax cuts" expire after the recession is over, are "highly contractionary."

"Our estimates suggest that a tax increase of 1 percent of GDP reduces output over the next three years by 3 percent," the Romers wrote. "The effect is highly significant."

Higher taxes are the prime ingredient of European austerity. The danger is that with sluggish growth revenues will languish and the bond market will shut down, as in Greece. Then spending gets cut with a meat cleaver, not a scalpel.

House Budget Chairman Paul Ryan understands this. House Democrats' "balanced approach" — with tax rate increases — "just means let's start European austerity right now," he told The Washington Examiner last week.

Ryan's budget, which passed the House, would cut tax rates but would also eliminate tax preferences. Many high earners would end up paying more. But because they wouldn't face higher rates on the next dollar they earn, there would be no incentive to seek tax shelters.

You can find Democrats who agree with this approach, though they'd differ with Ryan on details. But they won't speak up as long as their leader keeps pursuing that great white whale.

Michael Barone, senior political analyst for The Washington Examiner (www.washingtonexaminer.com), is a resident fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, a Fox News Channel contributor and a co-author of The Almanac of American Politics. To find out more about Michael Barone, and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate Web page at www.creators.com.

COPYRIGHT 2012 THE WASHINGTON EXAMINER

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Sir;... Just a quick hit and run, here; but if growth has been fed to the rich by years of low taxation that did not support government, or infrastructure, and wallowed us in institutional decline- with educational and health care costs beyond the reach of indiviuals and to the point of swamping government, then what is wrong with taxing to the point of limited growth???
I know the rising tide theory, but it is so much nonsense... I know the trickle down theory, and it is a trick...If you want to correct generations of capital oriented tax policy that has left the country crumbling and endangered, mired in depression, and suffering anxiety, anger, and malaise on the backs of the poor; then good luck with that...Because the poor have been picked clean of capital, and now all they have to sell is their right to a pot of porrage.. I know the lyrics: We need more millionaires to prove success is yours to lose, but billionaires their loot refuse, so wealth must come from me and you...
We make all these new millionaires... And with our stuggles for ever last dollar of our budgets we give their millions meaning...But we see what our sacrifices mean to them... They will pack up and leave at the sight of the tax man...They give not to God nor to Caesar... And the reason we are supposed to live in poverty as a nation, and live with the sight of poverty blighting our eyes, and with the effects of poverty obvious in every road, every hospital, every college, and every other public insitution is because if the rich do not get richer none of us can even survive...
Why make it our problem when their success has burdened the people with so many of our problems???...They have cut themselves out of their profit margins... They hired computers and robots and fired people, and now they cannot make a market of us, so they want to deny to government even the power to keep us alive...Europe, which actually has a safety net is finding it cannot ask more from the people than it has already asked, that they take less than they deserve in the hopes of government making things right long term...

To sacrifice is good for people...People feel they belong to the relationships the sacrifice for...But the price of the burdens government bears of the old, the infirm, the mindless and the young is great and growing greater...Something has to give... We could use a few less billionaires if we can divide their goods between people who wil actually pay taxes on them... If the rich are really self made, and owing nothing to the society which helped make them; then they do not need to be propped up, and protected by government...Let them make our money all over again if they have the formula... Otherwise the alchemy of capitalism which is only so much of smoke and mirrors should be buried as an artifact...
Surely, countries suffer the want of products and commerce; but they also suffer too much of production and commerce, that puts a price on all things priceless, like life, liberty, and truth...Doesn't the preconception that growth of the economy, and of the number of millionaires twist your view of truth into a pretzel??? You know that it does... Thanks... Sweeney
Comment: #1
Posted by: James A, Sweeney
Mon May 21, 2012 4:53 AM
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