Amid all the political and media hoopla about the
"fiscal cliff" crisis, there are a few facts that are worth noting.
First of all, despite all the melodrama about raising
taxes on "the rich," even if that is done it will scarcely make a
dent in the government's financial problems. Raising the tax rates on everybody
in the top two percent will not get enough additional tax revenue to run the
government for ten days.
And what will the government do to pay for the other
355 days in the year?
All the political angst and moral melodrama about
getting "the rich" to pay "their fair share" is part of a
big charade. This is not about economics, it is about politics. Taxing
"the rich" will produce a drop in the bucket when compared to the
staggering and unprecedented deficits of the Obama administration.
No previous administration in the entire history of
the nation ever finished the year with a trillion dollar deficit. The Obama
administration has done so every single year. Yet political and media
discussions of the financial crisis have been focussed overwhelmingly on how to
get more tax revenue to pay for past and future spending.
The very catchwords and phrases used by the Obama
administration betray how phony this all is. For example, "We are just
asking the rich to pay a little more."
This is an insult to our intelligence. The government
doesn't "ask" anybody to pay anything. It orders you to pay the taxes
they impose and you can go to prison if you don't.
Then there are all the fancy substitute words for
plain old spending-- words like "stimulus" or "investing in the
industries of the future."
The theory about "stimulus" is that
government spending will stimulate private businesses and financial
institutions to put more of their money into the economy, speeding up the
recovery. But the fact that you call something a "stimulus" does not
make it a stimulus.
Stimulus spending began during the Bush administration
and has continued full blast during the Obama administration. But the end
result is that both businesses and financial institutions have had record
amounts of their own money sitting idle. The rate of circulation of money slowed
down. All this is the opposite of stimulus.
What about "investing in the industries of the
future"? Does the White House come equipped with a crystal ball? Calling
government spending "investment" does not make it investment any more
than calling spending "stimulus" makes it stimulate anything.
What in the world would lead anyone to think that
politicians have some magic way of knowing what the industries of the future
are? Thus far the Obama administration has repeatedly "invested" in
the bankruptcies of the present, such as Solyndra.
Using lofty words to obscure tawdry realities extends
beyond the White House. Referring to the Federal Reserve System's creation of
hundreds of billions of new dollars out of thin air as "quantitative
easing" makes it seem as if this is some soothing and esoteric process,
rather than amounting essentially to nothing more than printing more money.
Debasing the value of money by creating more of it is
nothing new or esoteric. Irresponsible governments have done this, not just for
centuries, but for thousands of years.
It is a way to take people's wealth from them without
having to openly raise taxes. Inflation is the most universal tax of all.
All the pretty talk about how tax rates will be raised
only on "the rich" hides the ugly fact that the poorest people in the
country will see the value of their money decline, just like everybody else,
and at the same rate as everybody else, when the government creates more money
and spends it.
If you have $100 and, after inflation follows from
"quantitative easing," that $100 dollars will only buy what $80
bought before, then that is the same economically as if the government had
taxed away one-fifth of your money and spent it.
But it is not the same politically, so long as
gullible people don't look beyond words to the reality that inflation taxes
everybody, the poorest as well as the richest.
One of the big advantages that President Obama has, as
he plays "chicken" with the Congressional Republicans along the
"fiscal cliff," is that Obama is a master of the plausible lie, which
will never be exposed by the mainstream media-- nor, apparently, by the
Republicans.
A key lie that has been repeated over and over,
largely unanswered, is that President Bush's "tax cuts for the rich"
cost the government so much lost tax revenue that this added to the budget
deficit-- so that the government cannot afford to allow the cost of letting the
Bush tax rates continue for "the rich."
It sounds very plausible, and constant repetition
without a challenge may well be enough to convince the voting public that, if
the Republican-controlled House of Representatives does not go along with
Barack Obama's demands for more spending and higher tax rates on the top 2
percent, it just shows that they care more for "the rich" than for
the other 98 percent.
What is remarkable is how easy it is to show how
completely false Obama's argument is. That also makes it completely
inexplicable why the Republicans have not done so.
The official statistics which show plainly how wrong
Barack Obama is can be found in his own "Economic Report of the
President" for 2012, on page 411. You can look it up.
You may be able to find a copy of the "Economic
Report of the President" for 2012 at your local public library. Or you can
buy a hard copy from the Government Printing Office or download an electronic
version from the Internet.
For those who find that "a picture is worth a
thousand words," they need only see the graphs published in the November
30th issue of Investor's Business Daily.
What both the statistical tables in the "Economic
Report of the President" and the graphs in Investor's Business Daily show
is that (1) tax revenues went up-- not down-- after tax rates were cut during
the Bush administration, and (2) the budget deficit declined, year after year,
after the cut in tax rates that have been blamed by Obama for increasing the
deficit.
Indeed, the New York Times reported in 2006: "An
unexpectedly steep rise in tax revenues from corporations and the wealthy is
driving down the projected budget deficit this year."
While the New York Times may not have expected this,
there is nothing unprecedented about lower tax rates leading to higher tax
revenues, despite automatic assumptions by many in the media and elsewhere that
tax rates and tax revenues automatically move in the same direction. They do
not.
The Congressional Budget Office has been embarrassed
repeatedly by making projections based on the assumption that tax revenues and
tax rates move in the same direction.
This has happened as recently as the George W. Bush
administration and as far back as the Reagan administration. Moreover, tax
revenues went up when tax rates went down, as far back as the Coolidge
administration, before there was a Congressional Budget Office to make false
predictions.
The bottom line is that Barack Obama's blaming
increased budget deficits on the Bush tax cuts is demonstrably false. What
caused the decreasing budget deficits after the Bush tax cuts to suddenly
reverse and start increasing was the mortgage crisis. The deficit increased in
2008, followed by a huge increase in 2009.
So it is sheer hogwash that "tax cuts for the
rich" caused the government to lose tax revenues. The government gained
tax revenues, not lost them. Moreover, "the rich" paid a larger
amount of taxes, and a larger share of all taxes, after the tax rates were cut.
That is because people change their economic behavior
when tax rates are changed, contrary to what the Congressional Budget Office
and others seem to assume, and this can stimulate the economy more than a
government "stimulus" has done under either Bush or Obama.
Yet there is no need to assume that Barack Obama is
mistaken about the way to get the economy out of the doldrums. His top priority
has always been increasing the size and scope of government. If that means
sacrificing the economy or the truth, that is no deterrent to Obama. That is
why he is willing to play chicken with Republicans along the fiscal
cliff.
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