The
Economy and the
Future of the Bush Tax Cuts
By
John Hendrickson
“Tax
revision should be viewed only from the angle of what is best for
the country as a whole,” noted Andrew Mellon who served as Secretary
of the Treasury and engineer of the Harding- Coolidge prosperity of
the 1920s.[1]
This fall Congress will be debating whether or not the tax cuts
initiated by Congress during President George W. Bush’s
administration (Bush Tax Cuts) will be renewed, partially renewed,
or allowed to expire, which would cause a massive tax increase in a
weak economy. Although the economy has shown some signs of recovery
from the “Great Recession,” the economic outlook is still uncertain.
Unemployment is currently at 9.5 percent and the current policy
direction, including the future of the Bush Tax Cuts, has caused
uncertainty in the marketplace. Ending the recession and creating
jobs requires not additional stimulus spending, but renewing the
Bush Tax Cuts and cutting government spending, which will provide a
stimulus for the private sector and eliminate uncertainty.
If the
Bush Tax Cuts are allowed to expire tax rates will increase
across-the-board. As described recently by economist Arthur Laffer
in The Wall Street Journal:
George
W. Bush’s tax cuts expire (January 1, 2011) on that date, meaning
that the highest federal personal income tax rate will go to 39.6
percent from 35 percent, the highest federal dividend tax rate pops
up to 39.6 percent from 15 percent, the capital gains tax rate to 20
percent from 15 percent, and the estate tax rate to 55 percent from
zero. Lots and lots of other changes will also occur as a result of
the sunset provision in the Bush tax cuts.[2]
Although renewal of the Bush Tax Cuts is still uncertain, it does
appear that some Democrats in the United States Senate are
supporting a renewal of the tax cuts. The debate will surface over
whether or not all of the cuts will be renewed, or just the cuts
affecting the middle class. “The Obama administration’s approach is
to look at tax policy mainly through the prism of class warfare,”
noted Dan Mitchell, a Senior Fellow at the CATO Institute.[3]
Mellon
argued that “tax revision should never be made the football either
of partisan or class politics,” and he stated that he “never viewed
taxation as a means of rewarding one class of taxpayers or punishing
another.”[4]
The current tax debate must be examined in light of what will best
work for the economy, and the question must be asked whether or not
a substantial tax increase will help or hinder the economy.
Peter
Morici, an economist and Professor at the University of Maryland’s
Smith School of Business, recently wrote that “raising taxes now
would kill the economic recovery, push unemployment well above ten
percent and boot the real problem, runaway spending, to President
Obama’s successor.”[5]
Even though the economy has shown some positive signs of recovery
the situation is still fragile as business confidence remains low,
unemployment is still at 9.5 percent, and the issue of uncontrolled
government spending is threatening the financial security of the
nation.
Failure
to renew the Bush Tax Cuts will result in an economic decline and
continual high unemployment. Businesses, investors, and
entrepreneurs will not be investing in the economy, hiring new
employees, and creating new products if they are faced with high
rates of taxation. Currently businesses are not investing, but
waiting with anxiety to see what policies will or will not be
enacted by Congress and the Obama administration. “But where the
government takes away an unreasonable share of his earnings, the
incentive to work is no longer there and a slackening of effort is
the result,” wrote Mellon.[6]
In addition, he argued that “more and more the business adventure
becomes too hazardous and the high spirit of initiative disappears
in discouragement.[7]
“As a
result of higher tax rates on those people in the highest tax
brackets, there will be less employment, output, sales, profits and
capital gains — all leading to lower payrolls and lower tax
receipts,” wrote Laffer.[8]
In fact, recent history has shown that lowering taxes not only leads
to economic growth, but increased revenues for government. The tax
cuts initiated in the 20th century by Presidents Warren
G. Harding, Calvin Coolidge, John F. Kennedy, and Ronald Reagan all
created periods of economic growth and encouraged the private sector
to work.
All of
the Bush Tax Cuts should be renewed, but in addition to renewing the
tax cuts, Congress must begin to cut spending and paying down the
debt. The economic stimulus, which cost $862 billion, failed to
solve unemployment, and federal spending on entitlements, including
the new health-care reform law, is creating an unsustainable
financial situation. The Congressional Budget Office has projected
that by the end of the decade “President Obama’s budget will push
the debt to $20 trillion.”[9]
Currently the national debt is over $13 trillion, the deficit is
projected to be $1.3 trillion, and deficits are projected to
continue. The problem is not tax cuts, but rather uncontrolled
government spending.
The
battle in Congress over the Bush Tax Cuts is a larger debate over
political philosophy. President Obama and Democrats in Congress are
continuing to push an agenda that rejects limited government in
favor of an expanded welfare and regulatory state. It is exactly
this agenda — health-care reform, expanded financial regulation, cap
and trade, tax and spending increases — that is preventing an
economic recovery. Steve Forbes, editor-in-chief of Forbes,
recently wrote that “this Administration remains resolutely statist
and, when it comes to free markets, clueless.”[10]
Perhaps
the best example for the administration in promoting economic and
financial stability is following the ideas of Presidents Harding and
Coolidge. As economic historian and CATO Institute Senior Fellow Jim
Powell recently wrote:
The financial achievement of Harding and Coolidge was extraordinary
in light of subsequent experience — cutting spending 50 percent,
taxes 40 percent, and paying off almost a third of the debt during
that decade. And getting unemployment lower than in any other
peacetime period on record before or since.[11]
The possibility of the economy falling into a double-dip recession
is still a possibility. In order to bring economic stability,
business confidence, and start resolving the spending crisis
policymakers must not only renew the Bush Tax Cuts to encourage
private sector growth, but also to start reducing spending. Mellon
argued that “the adoption of a sound system of taxation will have a
favorable effect in many directions,” including the promotion of
business and “increase the number of jobs and at the same time
advance general prosperity.”[12]
John
Hendrickson is a Research Analyst at Public Interest Institute.
The
views expressed herein are those of the author and not necessarily
those of Public Interest Institute or Tax Education Foundation.
They are brought to you in the interest of a better-informed
citizenry.
[1]
Andrew W. Mellon, Taxation: The People’s Business,
New York, The MacMillan Company, 1924, p. 127.
[10]
Steve Forbes, “Obama’s soft-core socialism,” Forbes,
August 9, 2010, p. 15-16.
[11]
Jim Powell, “A note from author Jim Powell, Senior Fellow at
the CATO Institute,” July 26, 2010, Silent Cal: The Life
and Times of President Calvin Coolidge, <http://silentcal.com/>
(August 3, 2010).