Townhall
Finance...
Obama
Fails
Math Portion of Presidency Test
by Bob
Beauprez
January 8, 2012
“The math
is the math. You can’t lower (tax) rates and raise revenues.” - Barack
Obama,
December 11, 2011
When I
heard the President make the above statement to Steve Kroft during an
interview
on the CBS News program 60 Minutes…well, I thought of Ronald Reagan.
No, not
because Obama seemed Reaganesque, as he would want us to believe, but
because
Ronald Reagan believed just the opposite, and proved that he was right.
And, I
thought of Presidents Harding, Kennedy, and George W. Bush, too. All
Presidents
that had lowered tax rates that stimulated more economic activity – and
increased the total revenue sent to the U.S. Treasury.
But, Obama
seemed so sure of himself, as he is pretty good at doing, that I just
had to go
check the record. After all, he’s the one who said, “The math is the
math.” So,
I figured the numbers would hold the truth.
Warren G.
Harding took office in March 1921 inheriting a huge debt from World War
I and
an economy in shambles. Harding had campaigned on a promise to slash
spending,
and once elected he put Charles Dawes, an experienced businessman and
banker,
in charge of the budget. In 1921, they reduced federal spending from
$6.3 billion
to $5 billion. In 1922, they slashed it to $3.3 billion – a reduction
of 47.6%
in just two years – and had the budget back in balance.
Harding
believed the way to increase revenue was to stimulate economic activity
and
that meant going after the tax code. Harding and his Treasury Secretary
Andrew
Mellon understood that the top tax rate of 77 percent was encouraging
wealthy
Americans to seek tax shelters and investments that allowed them to
avoid
sending the government nearly 4 of every 5 dollars they made. Mellon
said the
following:
“The
history of taxation shows that taxes which are inherently excessive are
not
paid. The high rates inevitably put pressure upon the taxpayer to
withdraw his
capital from productive business and invest it in tax-exempt securities
or to
find other lawful methods of avoiding the realization of taxable
income. The
result is that the sources of taxation are drying up; wealth is failing
to
carry its share of the tax burden; and capital is being diverted into
channels
which yield neither revenue to the Government nor profit to the people.”
Harding and
Mellon cut all individual income tax rates. The top rate gradually
dropped from
77 to 25 percent by 1929. The lowest income earner’s rate was cut from
4 to
just 1/2 percent. It worked.
The economy
roared and the Treasury was the beneficiary of the surge in incomes and
corporate profits. Harding’s policies even created a budget surplus
which he
used to pay down the wartime debt. Furthermore, even though the top
marginal
rates were dramatically reduced, wealth did “carry its share of the tax
burden”
as Mellon predicted. The tax burden paid by what qualified as “the
wealthy” at
the time ($50,000 and up) increased from 44.2 percent in 1921 to 78.4
percent
by 1928. Harding never lived to see many of the benefits of his bold
leadership. He died of a heart attack in August of 1923, but his
policies were
ably continued by his successor, Calvin Coolidge.
During the
Great Depression, opponents demonized Harding and Coolidge claiming
their low
taxes somehow caused the recession. Herbert Hoover and then Franklin
Roosevelt
reversed the policies of Harding and Coolidge raising tax rates
asserting that
the government needed the money, that higher rates were only fair, and
that
somehow there would be no negative economic consequences. Sound
familiar?
Amity
Schlaes’s great book, The Forgotten Man: A New History of the Great
Depression
documents in detail how the Keynesian policies of Hoover and FDR
prolonged both
the misery and recovery of that era, and established a legacy of big
government
that is at the root of our nation’s fiscal problem today.
John F.
Kennedy inherited an economic recession in 1961 and an economy still
recovering
from World War II and the after effects. But, he also faced the growing
national security threat from the Soviet Union, The Cold War. Sounding
very
much like Andrew Mellon, President Kennedy said the following:
“Our true
choice is not between tax reduction, on the one hand, and the avoidance
of
large Federal deficits on the other. It is increasingly clear that no
matter
what party is in power, so long as our national security needs keep
rising, an
economy hampered by restrictive tax rates will never produce enough
revenues to
balance our budget just as it will never produce enough jobs or enough
profits…
In short, it is a paradoxical truth that tax rates are too high today
and tax
revenues are too low and the soundest way to raise the revenues in the
long run
is to cut the rates now.”
Just as
happened four decades earlier, after Kennedy pushed through tax rate
reductions, economic activity increased and with it, the wealthy paid a
larger
portion of all income taxes. Total revenue increased 16.9 percent
between 1963
and 1966 (inflation adjusted dollars), and the portion of income taxes
paid by
those making over $50,000 increased by 57 percent while those earning
less than
$50,000 increased by just 11%. Once again, lower rates led to more
total
revenue receipts and a more progressive tax code (higher income earners
paying
a proportionately larger share).
Twenty
years later, Ronald Reagan came to the Oval Office following the Carter
era of
double digit inflation and interest rates with high unemployment
resulting in a
deep and stubborn recession. Reagan became the champion of what would
be known
as Supply Side Economics, or Reaganomics. With a capable assist from
economist
Art Laffer and Congressman Jack Kemp, Reagan successfully made the case
again
that lower rates stimulated economic activity and would lead to
increased total
revenue. The now legendary across the board tax rate cuts worked again.
Nominal
tax revenue increased between 1981 and 1989 a phenomenal 65.4 percent,
with
most of the growth after 1985 when the full effect of the tax cuts was
in
motion. Even in inflation adjusted dollars, revenues grew by nearly 21
percent
for the period. “Not bad. Not bad, at all,” as the Gipper might have
said.
As George
W. Bush took office a recession was just beginning. Bush passed a round
of tax
cuts in 2001 scheduled for gradual implementation. Then, with the
effects of
the recession still taking hold, the terrorist attacks of 9/11/01 dealt
the
economy an enormous blow. It was obvious that the economy needed a big
push
faster than the slow implementation schedule passed in 2001 was
providing. In
2003, Congress passed legislation to accelerate the implementation of
the 2001
tax rate reductions and added more, particularly for businesses.
Although
Barack Obama tries to tell a different version of history, the lower
across the
board tax rates led to more total revenue in the U.S. Treasury for the
fourth
time in a century.
Total
revenue increased from $1.782.3 billion in 2003 to $2,524.0 billion in
2008.
That’s a 41.6 percent increase in just five years; 20.3 percent in
inflation
adjusted dollars. In addition, during that same period 8.7 million more
jobs
were created according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. As Obama
said, “the
math is the math.” And, these numbers don’t lie.
Numbers
available from the Internal Revenue Service also prove that the current
tax
rates – the Bush tax rates – have yet again led to a more progressive
tax
system. The top income earners are paying a larger share of all taxes
after the
Bush Tax Cuts than they were before. For all the President’s
demagoguery
against those at the top of the income ladder, as the following chart
demonstrates, whatever the definition of “wealthy” is, the top few are
carrying
most of the load, and more low income earners are paying less or in
many cases
none at all. Here is a breakdown as provided by the IRS for the
percentage of
all income taxes paid for 2009 and 2001 ranked according to income
category:
Percentage
of Total Income Tax Paid by Income (AGI) Category
2009
2001
Top 1%
36.70%
33.89%
Top 5%
58.70%
53.25%
Top 10%
70.50%
64.89%
Top 25%
87.30%
82.90%
Top 50%
97.70%
96.03%
Bottom 50%
2.30%
3.97%
While total
revenue to the federal government increased following significant tax
reductions during each of the four mentioned Administrations, it is
also
noteworthy that the percentage of the GDP extracted by the government
in tax
receipts went down – another healthy indicator.
In the big
Kennedy growth years, government receipts declined from 17.8% of total
GDP in
1963 to 17.3% in 1966. Federal revenue equaled 19.6% of GDP as Reagan
took
office in 1981, but just 18.4% as he left in 1989. In 2000 as Bush was
getting
elected and just before the recession began, the government take of the
GDP was
20.6%. By the time he left office in 2008 it was 17.5%. I couldn’t find
comparable
numbers for the Harding years, but these make the point. Lower rates
dramatically increased economic activity creating more total revenue
for
government while leaving a larger percentage of the GDP in the private
sector
for further economic growth.
During the
current recession because of the massive unemployment and decline in
economic
activity, federal revenue has declined to just 14.9% of GDP in 2009 and
2010.
Unfortunately, spending by the government was 25.0% of GDP in 2009 and
23.8% in
2010 adding $2.7 trillion to the federal debt. The challenge facing
government
is to significantly restrain spending and adopt policies that encourage
economic expansion that will restore revenue to normal levels.
Historical data
clearly indicates that lower tax rates – not tax increases – is the
right means
to that end.
Democrats
like to posit that the Bush Tax Cuts somehow destroyed both jobs and
the
economy and caused the current economic rut we find ourselves in.
Harding,
Kennedy, and Reagan critics made the very same false arguments. In
every case,
after their policies led to more economic activity and more federal
revenue,
the politicians ramped up spending and eventually raised taxes. We also
know
what that did to the economy.
Democrats
also like to point to the Clinton economic policies – he raised taxes
in 1993 –
as evidence that tax increases somehow work. But, the numbers tell a
different
story; it didn’t work all that well, after all. Clinton was the
beneficiary of
some very good fortune including the end of the Cold War, the dot.com
boom,
exceptionally low energy prices and low inflation. Giddy with the
afterglow of
the Reagan economy and his good luck, Clinton and a Democrat Congress
raised
taxes in 1993. Curtis Dubay, a senior analyst for economic policy at
the
Heritage Foundation explains that from 1993 until 1997 the economy
“grew at a
pedestrian 3.3 percent per year.” That is solid performance, but not
exceptional according to Dubay, and he further notes that “real wages
declined,
despite the perception that the 1990’s were an era of unmitigated
abundance.”
As the
above chart demonstrates (for chart, click below), it wasn’t until
after a 1997
tax cut, passed by the Republican-led Congress, a tax cut “President
Clinton
resisted but eventually signed,” Dubay notes, that things took off in a
big
way. In particular the 1997 reduction of the capital gains rate from 28
percent
to 20 percent “opened the floodgates necessary for entrepreneurs to
develop,
harness, and bring to market the wonders of the new information
technologies,”
according to Dubay’s analysis.
In their
frequent “it’s all George Bush’s fault” rants about our economic woes,
Obama
and the Democrats conveniently forget to mention other names like
Barney Frank,
Chris Dodd, Franklin Raines, Fannie and Freddie, or the Community
Reinvestment
Act. And, when Obama demonizes all those “fat cat bankers” he fails to
hold up
his good friend John Corzine as “Exhibit-A.”
Obama would
have us believe that if the wealthy only paid their “fair share” our
problems would
be over. But, contrary to his revisionist version of history, there is
no
evidence to back up his theory. There is no math to support “his math.”
Obama
is making an all too familiar argument for America to commit more of
the same
mistakes of the past, not for adopting the wise lessons from history.
The
President is careful to never define what his upper ceiling of tax rate
“fairness” is. But, what history confirms is that Art Laffer was
absolutely
right when he demonstrated with his now famous graph that there is a
relationship between tax rates and tax revenue. Specifically, as taxes
increase
from low levels, tax revenues also increase. However, there is a point
(*T on
the following chart) at which taxes become such a disincentive that
people
don’t work as hard or eventually at all, and tax revenue declines.
President
Kennedy and Andrew Mellon made identical arguments.
Obama
intimates that if only a handful of wealthy folks kicked in their “fair
share”
that all would be well in Washington. In Osawatomie, Kansas he even
singled out
the top “one hundredth of 1 percent” and the “breathtaking greed of a
few” to
make his case for higher taxes. But, he avoids the severity of the
fiscal mess
America is in which has been dramatically compounded by his policies.
Andrew
Biggs is a scholar at the American Enterprise Institute and also the
former
Principal Deputy Commissioner of the Social Security Administration.
So, he’s
familiar with numbers – big numbers – and, particularly aware of the
challenges
that await America if we fail to reform existing entitlement programs.
Biggs
knows that jacking up the tax rate on the wealthy is no real solution.
According to his calculations, “to balance the budget over the next 25
years
would require an immediate and permanent 30 percent increase in all
federal
taxes.” All taxes, on everybody, by 30 percent, permanently – Harding,
Kennedy,
Reagan, Bush, and anyone with a little common-sense knows that would
crush the
economy, but it underscores that our problem is not that the wealthy or
any
other segment of the economy is taxed too little. Government spends way
too
much. The “fat cat” that Barack Obama should be demonizing is the one
in
Washington, DC.
When Steve
Kroft suggested that Obama’s $800 billion Economic Stimulus “didn’t
work,”
Obama got animated and interrupted saying the only thing wrong was that
he
hadn’t spent enough. “We should have done an even bigger Recovery Act,”
he
said. Based upon what? Certainly not the lessons of America’s political
and
economic history!
If Obama
were serious and really studied “the math,” he would be siding with
conservatives arguing that spending needs to be reduced to the 18-20%
of GDP
that sustained America throughout all but the war years of the last
century.
He could
champion scrapping the existing tax code and adopting a flat income tax
or a
consumption based plan like the Fair Tax. That would be a more logical
“fairness” argument for him to make, but he won’t.
He could
stop his administration’s deluge of new rules and regulations that are
further
burdening business and slowing recovery, but he won’t do that either.
In
Osawatomie, Obama declared that the America of the last 225 years was
no more.
The age of “you’re on your own economics” has ended, he said. The
“rugged
individualism and healthy skepticism of too much government” – which he
did
allow was “in America’s DNA” – well, apparently the President removed
that gene
from our gene pool. Henceforth, according to Obama, individuals and
families
will have to rely on the government to solve our problems and satisfy
our
wants. The nanny-state is open for business, and the business is
“spreading the
wealth” because income inequality is “the defining issue of our time.”
In this
new age of enlightenment – or, entitlement - no longer are all men
simply
created equal, we’re now committed to equal outcomes – regardless of
input.
If you
happen to be old-fashioned enough to still think that with low tax
rates and
limited regulation “our economy will grow stronger”... well, Obama says
you’re
wrong. “It doesn’t work. It never has worked,” he said without offering
his
evidence. That’s the “new math” in the Age of Obama. And, two plus two
probably
equals five, if Obama says so, too. Apparently the crowd was full of
people who
also shared his mistaken notion of history, and math, because they
responded
with roaring applause.
And, in
this Age of Obama, the government – and most particularly the President
– is no
longer burdened by the restraint of deriving its “just powers from the
consent
of the governed” through an affirmative vote of the people’s elected
representatives in Congress. As Obama told Kroft, “I want to work with
Congress…but what I’m not going to do is wait for Congress. So,
wherever we
have an opportunity…to get some things done…we’re just going to go
ahead and do
them.”
Obama is
keeping one of his campaign promises – to transform America. We’re
witnessing
it at frightening speed and massive consequence. Kroft pointed out to
the
President that 75% of people believe he has America heading in the
wrong
direction. But, Obama was unbowed, even indignant. “We did all the
right
things,” he said, and “we’ve got a lot more work to do.” Once again,
Obama
refuses to accept the truth in the numbers. Three out of four Americans
are
sending a message he refuses to accept.
Mr.
President you can fool some of the people some of the time, but not
enough of
them to win -- and certainly not to deserve -- re-election.
Read the
article, follow the charts and read other articles at Townhall Finance
|