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CENTER FOR
FULL EMPLOYMENT AND PRICE STABILITY Special
Report 03/01 February,
2003 OPPOSITION
TO THE BUSH TAX CUTS Recently, a
group of economists (including at least 10 Nobel laureates) has been
circulating a statement opposing the tax cuts proposed by President Bush. Their
critique boils down to three related points. First, they argue, the tax cuts
have been advanced as part of a stimulus package, but the design of the
proposal is flawed. It will not stimulate jobs and growth in the near-term.
Second, the tax cut plan is not “revenue neutral”, hence, will add
“to the nation’s projected chronic deficits.” Further, this
will reduce the government’s long-term capacity “to finance Social
Security and Medicare benefits as well as investments in schools, health,
infrastructure, and basic research”. Finally, the President’s plan
would impose a “permanent change in the tax structure”, when what
is needed, according to these economists, is an “immediate but
temporary” package to expand demand. In summary, a proper stimulus plan
would provide only “temporary incentives for investment”, spurring
“growth and jobs in the short term without exacerbating the long-term
budget outlook.” While we
share some skepticism about the likelihood that the President’s plan will
provide sufficient stimulus to prevent continued deterioration of economic
growth, we think the economists’ statement represents a flawed and even
dangerous misunderstanding of the problems faced by our economy. The First, and
most important, our federal government’s budget has become imbalanced to
a degree last seen in the 1920s. Partially due to budget-balancing agreements,
partially due to large increases of Social Security taxes in the 1980s, and
partially due to a long-term trend to devolve spending responsibility to the
states, the federal budget has become excessively biased to run surpluses at
moderate rates of economic growth. These surpluses, in turn, require that the
nongovernment sector taken as a whole (including households, firms, and the
foreign sector) must run deficits. Indeed, the record budget surpluses achieved
during the This leads
to the second headwind. The Third,
devolution has placed more responsibilities on state budgets. This is undes Finally,
the In
conclusion, the notion that any stimulus package should provide only a
temporary boost, that investment incentives should be temporary, and that tax
cuts must be revenue-neutral seriously misunderstands our present situation.
While we have some doubts about the President’s plan, we do share his apparent belief that
tax cuts should be permanent, that spending incentives should be geared to the
long-term, and that a bias toward fiscal deficits is nothing to fear. The
Center for Full Employment and Price Stability is a non-partisan, non-profit
policy institute at the Additional
C-FEPS publications related to the issues discussed in this Special Report can
be found at: |
- ReOrient global Keynesianism (3) - Ecology, g kohler Wed 19 Feb 2003, 15:57 GMT
- Voices of Reform: Ours, UMKC-CFEPS, Localists, John Gelles Tue 18 Feb 2003, 21:02 GMT
- lectureship, Lee, Frederic Tue 18 Feb 2003, 17:22 GMT
- Assistance Please, John Marangos Tue 18 Feb 2003, 04:01 GMT
- C-FEPS report on Economists' Statement, Forstater, Mathew Mon 17 Feb 2003, 22:30 GMT
- Re: C-FEPS report on Economists' Statement, Warren Mosler Tue 18 Feb 2003, 02:31 GMT
- <Possible follow-up(s)>
- Re: C-FEPS report on Economists' Statement, mongiovg Tue 18 Feb 2003, 17:23 GMT
- Re: C-FEPS report on Economists' Statement, J. Barkley Rosser, Jr. Tue 18 Feb 2003, 18:36 GMT
- Re: C-FEPS report on Economists' Statement, pdavidso Tue 18 Feb 2003, 20:49 GMT