Evaluation of the policies of George W. Bush and his Republican conservatives on America.
Philadelphia Inquirer Editorial
Published on May 30, 2006 By COL Gene In Politics


Below is the Editorial today from the Philadelphia Inquirer titled, Tax Cuts and the Deficits which is 100 % in sink with the analysis I have included in my new book. In a nut shell, the Presidents former economic advisor, N. Gregory Mankiw admits that the NEW revenue generated from the Bush tax cuts have only provided 1/2 the revenue lost from the tax cuts and the other half have become part of the deficits. For those that claim the deficit is because of the added spending on hurricanes, terrorism and the War in Iraq. The Comptroller general, David Walker said only 1/3 of the growing deficit has been caused by that added spending.

In other words, the Bush Tax Cuts are driving America into debt that our children will pay for in the years to come! The sources of this analysis are the CBO and OMB. So please do not tell me it is some liberal conspiracy. What we have is just what Bush 41 said, Voodoo Economics. Another good reason to retire Senator Rick Santorum who supported the Bush Tax cuts including the $70 Billion raid on the treasury in early May.





Posted on Tue, May. 30, 2006



Tax Cuts and Deficits

Editorial | Bad math, slick politics: We'll pay, eventually


For the past five years, Congress and President Bush have been cutting taxes in the face of huge deficits, all the while peddling a math myth to the public.
Tax cuts won't make the deficits worse, they say. Tax cuts will stimulate so much economic growth that federal tax revenue will actually increase. Tax cuts, they are fond of saying, pay for themselves.
Actually, no. Economists of all stripes agree that federal tax cuts by themselves do not boost federal revenue back to the level before the cuts were enacted.
Tax cuts do boost economic activity. This growth does replace a portion of the revenue once generated by the eliminated taxes. But far from all. Very far. Researchers' estimates of this replacement effect vary from around 15 percent to 50 percent, depending on the type of tax cut and the prior rate.
Any responsible politician should know this, but polls persist in peddling the cozy myth. Sen. Rick Santorum (R., Pa.) played along earlier this month when Congress extended tax cuts on capital gains and dividend income for two years, at a cost to the federal treasury of $70 billion.
"We've put these tax provisions in place," Santorum said, "and they've raised money."
Even President Bush's former economic adviser, N. Gregory Mankiw, concedes that activity spurred by the capital gains tax cuts made up only about half of the lost revenue.
What do you call the other half? Under this administration, you call it "deficit."
Data from the president's own Office of Management and Budget refute the argument that tax cuts "pay for themselves." Over the past three years, with tax cuts in effect, federal revenue was $316 billion lower than OMB had predicted, in 2003, that it would have been without tax cuts.
The federal deficit this fiscal year is projected at more than $330 billion.
From 2001 to 2005, federal revenue fell at an average rate of 0.6 percent when adjusted for inflation and population growth, according to the left-leaning think tank Center on Budget and Policy Priorities in Washington.
Some Republican lawmakers point out that tax receipts through April were up about $137 billion, or 11 percent, compared with the same period last year. Credit tax cuts for some of that, if you want, but be aware that national economies are complex creatures that grow or shrink based on dozens of factors, of which tax rates are only one. Inflation, too, could partly explain it.
But that increase still is not nearly enough to offset recent losses to the federal coffers. Nor do the White House's own projections expect deficits to end anytime soon.
Again, the key point: No matter what you've been repeatedly told, an improved economy does not generate all the tax revenue that was lost due to cutting federal taxes in the first place. The evidence proving this basic point has been piling up since Ronald Reagan's tenure, but many tax-cut fans still won't admit it. Why? Because the pay-for-themselves theory was never based on fiscal evidence. It was a theology, a faith-based system defended all the more strenuously because of that.
(A side point: Tax cuts can come much closer to paying for themselves on a local stage, in a city such as Philadelphia, where comparatively high taxes really do discourage investment, and those seeking to escape those taxes do not have to leave the nation but merely take a step across City Avenue.)
The federal tax-cut mythology wouldn't have such dire consequences, if Congress and the president reduced federal spending in line with the lower revenues.
Since Reagan, that draconian balancing act has been the goal of some conservatives bent on cutting the social programs that always have irritated them.
Trouble is, that plan hasn't worked. In five-plus years of almost total domination of Washington by the self-described "conservatives" of the White House and Capitol Hill, federal spending has increased about 29 percent, even as tax cuts drained the Treasury.
And, no, not all that spending is due to hurricanes, terrorism and wars. (Let's not even get into the point that the wildly costly Iraq War was a choice, not a necessity.) David Walker, comptroller-general of the United States, says only about a third of the stated deficit can be traced to those causes.
Remember those golden days of the 2000 presidential campaign when the big issue was how to spend the roughly $5.6 trillion in federal surpluses projected for this decade?
Instead, surpluses turned to deficits, with a vengeance, once the Bush tax cuts went into effect. During the Bush years, the national debt has soared from $5.8 trillion to more than $8.3 trillion.
Why haven't the Republican powers inside the Beltway cut government more? Well, some of them were too busy throwing government money at the corporate friends who keep them in power and get them onto all the nice golf courses.
But the bigger reason is that every time budget-cutters hover their ax over any of the middle-class benefits where the big money flows, voters scream bloody murder.
Turns out people really like most of what big government provides.
They like the help with J.J.'s college tuition, and with Grandma's nursing home bills and prescription drugs. They like having a teaching hospital full of brilliant doctors and expensive equipment nearby. They demand a strong national defense and better homeland security. And they are really, really fond of the tax deduction for their home mortgage interest.
Taxpayers are human. They like a good deal. If politicians tell them they can get all the government benefits they secretly love at a discounted price, they'll cheer.
And, as some genuine fiscal conservatives are ruefully coming to realize, people who are getting government at what feels like a discounted price (i.e. lower taxes) aren't going to clamor for less government. They're going to clamor for more, for benefits like a prescription drug benefit that Medicare has no idea how to pay for.
But, in fact, these government benefits aren't really being bought at a discount. They're being bought with reckless borrowing. They'll get paid for, all right, but the payment will come down the road in higher taxes, higher interest rates and economic anxiety.
Tax cuts pay for themselves? That's just an irresponsible alibi for making our children and grandchildren pay for our self-indulgent little party.

Comments (Page 3)
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on Jun 01, 2006
It's great when he says "people who can afford it". I want to know who put him in charge to decide how much Americans that actually WORK should pay in taxes.
on Jun 01, 2006
Bakerstreet

I have said we need to look at the budget and cut spending. However, all non-mandated non defense spending DOES NOT equal $600 Billion. Social security today generates a $170 Billion surplus and Medicare about $23 Billion surplus. Those two issues are separate from the general federal government budget and are paid for by separate taxes and are paid to those that meet the purpose for which they were designed.

I am not talking about expanding government spending but to bring Government spending into balance with tax revenue. There is always waste and we should insist that our government minimizes that waste. However the idea that when our government spends money either to employ someone or to purchase goods and services the money goes down a black hole is not true. Every dollar the Government spends and is paid as salaries or to companies that make THINGS or provide SERVICES stimulate the economy the same as if individuals spent the money.

The idea that individuals can better decide HOW or on WHAT to spend their money on is also not true in all cases. Many things we need to operate as a country would not be provided if left up to individuals. They would not pay for defense; build roads or a thousand other things. We must have the various functions of Government to prosper such as FBI, CIA DOD Commerce, Education, Homeland Security, Health etc. There is blatant spending that only benefits a few people and it is called PORK. That is at an all time high and is the FIRST place we should CUT. However making believe you could cut $600 Billion and insure the essential functions and services that the VAST MAJORITY want the government to provide is simply untrue. That is the position of people that do not want to face the issue. That issue is when we decide as a country what we will spend we MUST have tax Revenue EQUAL to the level of spending!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! You and others may feel certain expenditures are not needed. However, if the majority via the Representative type of government chooses to spend for example $2.6 Trillion in FY 2007, then there must be $2.6 Trillion in tax revenue to pay for that level of spending. That is what Bush and the SO CALLED conservatives are not doing. They want to SPEND but not PAY. They want to cut taxes and BORROW that money to make up for the loss in revenue from that tax cuts and then pay interest on the money borrowed to replace the tax revenue lost from the tax cuts. We give a $1.00 tax cut and see ONLY $.50 in new tax revenue develop from new economic activity from the tax cut. That is WAST and poor fiscal management!
on Jun 01, 2006
I notice col you once again avoid everything towards you.
on Jun 01, 2006
Those surpluses aren't enough when you look at how much will be needed by the people paying in now. They are not separate from the corruption of government, only tallied separately. The same greed and waste goes into managing them that goes into wasting money on every other part of government, because the same greedy, wasteful people manage it.

You are either talking about expanding government, or you are ignorant of the people you are supporting. There has never, ever in our history been a time when there was a surplus that they didn't expand the government to meet it. Your much-hailed balanced budget of the 90's was an invitation for Dems and Republicans alike to start a feeding frenzy on revenue that continues to this day.

Your asinine idea that people wouldn't see to the defense and care of their own country betrays your socialist attitude. You don't believe in real democracy, obviously, because we are all too ignorant to care for ourselves. It would be no different then if we chose people who really represented our wishes. People like you not only accept that we lack representation, but applaud it because we can't be expected to know how to care for ourselves.

In reality people like you just blindly hire wolves to care for sheep. Every single part of government you point to is surely beneficial, but also plagued by malfeasance and waste. It doesn't matter to me that you can point to x amount of money going to a necesary service. You ignore that funds so allocated can be hijacked, earmarked, and sent other places after the fact, and that those services themselves don't give us our money's worth in terms of services.

You can rattle on and on but the first place anyone, individuals, businesses, governments, look when they want to balance their budgets is to cut out waste. Pouring water into a leaky bucket doesn't fix the bucket, and pouring money into a wasteful, corrupt government only makes it more wasteful and more corrupt. We shouldn't be borrowing money, no, nor should we be stealing it from the taxpayers.

Money taken out of the economy is less money moving within the economy, which is a less healthy economy. You would have the government eat a larger and larger hunk until the economy was just about perpetuating a babysitter government. You can't for a moment pretend that is fiscally responsible.

on Jun 01, 2006
BakerStreet

Bottom line- If the Congress agrees to spent $2.6 Trillion next year we MUST tax $2.6 Trillion next year. You are blowing hot air when you say people will provide the services and provide for things like defense, roads, infrastructure that are ESSENTIAL to maintaining our society. I am all for trying to operate Government in an effective way which is NOT what Bush is doing. However, making believe ANY Congress or the vast majority will agree to cutting $600 Billion per year is a fantasy ride in Disneyland. WE need some cuts, better enforcement of tax laws and higher tax rate on the people that can afford to pay a little more. Let’s get back to what Greenspan and O’Neil said continue the tax cuts so long as there is a surplus to pay for them!
on Jun 01, 2006
"Bottom line- If the Congress agrees to spent $2.6 Trillion next year we MUST tax $2.6 Trillion next year. '


On the contrary, I seem to recall a war fought over taxation without representation. If they are stealing our money we are under no obligation to keep their purse full.

"You are blowing hot air when you say people will provide the services and provide for things like defense, roads, infrastructure that are ESSENTIAL to maintaining our society."


And you are blowing hot air when you say such and then claim to be devoted to representitive government. In reality you must think government is there to direct us, not the ther way around. In reality it is our money, and our government that has been hijacked. You would applaud that by claiming we are too greedy or stupid to see to our own care.

You've most certainly shown your stripes here, Col. Your claims about being conservative have pretty much been exploded now.
on Jun 01, 2006
BakerStreet

ARE YOU ON DRUGS?

IF The SAME Representatives that WE ELECTED agree to spend the money they also have the OBLIGATION to raise taxes to pay for that spending! Where the HELL is the Taxation WITHOUT REPRESENTATION?

The people we ELECT under this Republic VOTE on what to spend and then must find the way to pay for that spending. That DOES NOT include borrowing the money and putting the responsibility on future generations to pay for that spending!

You do not have the most basic understanding of Financial Management. No one and No country can just spend without regard to how the spending will be funded.
on Jun 01, 2006
You say, we are spending a lot more than we tax, so we must take more money out of the economy to fix it. Then you say I don't have any understanding of "Financial Management".

Oh, I think it would be obvious to anyone that a man who thinks that we are being accurately represented by this kind of gross malfeasance is the one on drugs. You think the folks who sent Mallohan to Congress wanted him to send millions back home to his pet projects run by his flunkies? Do people usually react favorably to stories of government waste and congressional pork?

Of course not. You are blind if you call what is going on in Congress real representation, and you are insane if you think that most people believe the government is there because we can't make good decisions for ourselves. It's insulting to see you keep banging the ultra-liberal drum of government oversight of our wealth. If they earned the responsiblity, maybe, but they are a failure at managing it.
on Jun 01, 2006
I mean, you have the gall to say I don't know about finances with a title like "Tax Cuts Create Deficits"? That's like saying wage cuts create bounced checks. I think there's an important step there in the middle that you are overlooking...
on Jun 01, 2006
kerstreet

What is taking money out of the economy is sending 40% of the increased interst to invstors outside the US we are paying on the increased debt becsause we do not pay for what we spend.
on Jun 01, 2006
People who put money in US investment are the ones who make the jobs that pay your taxes. It's infantile and dishonest to blame them for not making paying enough toward our society when they are investing IN our society. When they stop investing, and people lose their jobs, then see how much you make in tax revenue.

The problem you overlook is that every increase in taxes is not only matched by an increase in spending, but overtaken by it. Your excuse that we wouldn't pay for roads and schools is dishonest considering we pay probably twice as much for roads and schools as they cost, and fund government malfeasance with the excess.

At some point you have to say no. At some point you have to insist that Congress and government in general live within their means. They won't do that as long as you give them everything they ask for. If you want real change and you are worried about real debt, then stop allowing the government to borrow money when we refuse.
on Jun 01, 2006
I have no doubt col is a socialist. Any person in America who is successful should NOT pay for others peoples mistakes.

Will you just admit you want income redistribution? Let's tax poor people since they use governments services. A minimal tax will not affect them.
on Jun 01, 2006
What part of the conclusions of the president's economic advisor and the Comptroller General's that the tax cuts are ADDING to the Deficit do you not understand? We cut taxes by $1.00 and that tax cuts produces ONLY $.50 in new Federal revenue from the growth produced. WE HAVE A NOT LOSS OF 50%!

What part of we are BORROWING the money to continue the tax cuts do you not understand?
on Jun 01, 2006
"What part of we are BORROWING the money to continue the tax cuts do you not understand?"


Why we tolerate it instead of insisting they cut that 50 cents?
on Jun 01, 2006
I agree that col just does not understand. He doesn't care about the revenue at all. All he cares about is taxing successful Americans.

Why don't you put your efforts into getting the poor to work? That would be something that would actually help.
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