No Tax Cuts For Rich
by John Goodman
Issue 102 - February 27, 2008
Suppose we did need more money to add to our annual $2.1 trillion health care spending spree. Where could it come from?
Real health reform does not cost money. It saves money.
Conservatively, I would guess we could reduce health spending by
one-third and raise quality and increase access to care at the same
time. That's $7,000 for every U.S. household. Since government spends
almost half the money, we could all get an annual economic stimulus
check for $3,000 - leaving $50 billion behind for government to mop up
any remaining problems.
Alas, hardly anyone is in favor of real reform. For a lot of people,
reform doesn't even count as reform without sacrifice and atonement.
Think of California liberals and global warming. Nothing they do will
have any perceptible impact on the climate. But they don't feel good
about themselves unless they are enduring pain and discomfort.
In the Democratic primaries, here is the standard mantra: tax cuts for
the rich are depriving government of revenue which we desperately need
for health reform. All of this is exclaimed with almost religious
fervor and a level of hysteria that is hard to top, unless you count
this morsel from Paul Krugman in The New York Times: "for 30 years
American politics has been dominated by...Robin Hood in reverse, giving
unto those that hath, while taking from those who don't."
Now for an uncomfortable look at the facts. For the past 30 years,
there has been no lasting tax cut for the rich. And far from being
deprived of revenue, the federal government's share of national income
today is exactly where it has been, on the average, for the past 60
years. The penultimate sentence in the preceding paragraph deserves repetition
and emphasis: There has been no lasting tax cut for the rich.
What we have done, beginning in the Reagan administration 25 years ago,
is cut tax rates for the rich. But every time we cut rates, total taxes
paid by the rich went up, not down. As Art Laffer explained in The
Wall Street Journal the other day, the top 1% of taxpayers are on the
wrong side of the Laffer curve, and they have been there for almost the
entire sorry history of the income tax.
Every Republican tax rate reduction for the wealthiest taxpayers as well
as every Democratic one (both Kennedy and Clinton) has led to more
revenue for the Treasury. In Clinton's case, approving a Republican
capital gains rate reduction (from 28% to 20%) in 1996 is what produced
surpluses at the end of his presidency - surpluses that Clinton's own
Treasury Department never predicted!
Unlike ordinary mortals, the rich have enormous discretion over how they
receive their income - as wages, as dividends, as realized capital gains
or even as unrealized (untaxed) capital gains. So the way to get the
most money out of them is not to push rates up to 70% or 90% (where they
once were), but to lower them in order to coax the wealthy into
realizing more taxable income.
Furthermore, almost every time tax rates for the wealthiest have been
reduced, millions of low-income taxpayers have been removed from the tax
rolls. So that today almost half the population pays no income tax.
The upshot is that virtually every tax change in recent history -
whether Democrat or Republican - has made the tax code more progressive.
Since noneconomists often wonder whether they are being statistically
hoodwinked in these discussions, let us be clear:
Over the past two decades the income tax system has become increasing
more progressive, no matter how progressivity is measured.
So here are the takeaways: (1) government revenues today as a fraction
of national income are equal to their historic average, (2) we are
collecting more income taxes - both in total dollars and as a percent of
the total - from the wealthy than ever, (3) the tax system today is more
progressive by far than at any time in modern history and (4) repealing
the Bush rate reductions for high-income taxpayers is unlikely to
produce any extra revenue for health reform.
John Goodman is President of the National Center for Policy Analysis
For Michael Stroup's demonstration that Republican tax cuts have made
the income tax system more progressive than otherwise, go to
http://www.ncpa.org/pub/ba/ba606/
For Steven Moore's demonstration that capital gains rate cuts always
produce more capital gains tax revenues go to
http://www.ncpa.org/pub/st/st307/st307.pdf
For Art Laffer's explanation of all of this, go to
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1959323/posts
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