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My Question for Lou Dobbs

I occasionally (not too often) force myself to watch Lou Dobbs just in the interest of maintaining a diverse news/opinion diet. I would love to have the opportunity to challenge him on his protectionism and, specifically, his implicit argument that outsourcing offshore is evil. Primarily, I'd like ask Lou if he thinks it's evil for a U.S.-based company with U.S. operations to acquire new manufacturing equipment or information technology that enables it to conduct its operations with fewer employees. If not, then why is offshore outsourcing evil when it accomplishes the same purpose with the same impact on American workers, while also providing an opportunity for desperately poor people elsewhere to escape (or diminish) hunger and utter deprivation (which is why they'll work for far less compensation)?

Outsourcing is, on balance, a very good thing on a number of levels. First, it enables efficient capitalism, which means -- in the aggregate -- maximum productivity, optimal allocation of resources (generally speaking, with some exceptions), minimum prices of goods and services for consumers, moving jobs to people who need them most, the freeing of resources to where they are best applied (e.g., what economists call "comparative advantages" among nations -- for example, poor, low-cost labor countries producing labor-intensive products and more affluent, educated, tech-savvy countries producing high-tech or high value-added products) and as a result of all of the above, a higher material quality of life -- again, in aggregate. There is also the pragmatic point that we cannot wall ourselves off from the global economy (or at least not without tremendous price increases across much of the economy, lost jobs from our inability to export -- due to lower competitiveness and tariff wars -- and other negative consequences), so we cannot try to defy market forces and force U.S. companies to be less and less competitive.

Needless to say, some individuals suffer from outsourcing, as they do from open markets in general and even more broadly from capitalism (as opposed to pure socialism in which employment and compensation are guaranteed regardless of market forces -- at least until the whole system starts to deteriorate). I do believe that a society has some obligation to cushion the sufferring of those who are temporarily displaced, to ease the pain to a reasonable degree (e.g., unemployment benefits) and to aid in their transition to different jobs that hopefully fit better with what they can provide competitively in a global economy.

So, as I alluded to above, arguments against outsourcing are, for the most part, really arguments against capitalism. In other words, it values protection of particular jobs over a more efficient economy with all the benefits it provides for quality of life in the aggregate (i.e., for the population as a whole). The only twist is a presumed moral imperative to choose the protection of particular types of American jobs over the benefits to much poorer foreigners of shifting those jobs to them. And I would argue that, even leaving aside the moral argument that we should indeed care about a desperately poor person who happened to have the bad fortune of not being born here, forcing a substantial reduction in outsourcing (by legislation or public pressure) would harm most Americans for reasons I've explained above.

One exception to what I said above: If another country is clearly irresponsible in environmental policy or clearly, greatly abusive of labor (i.e., abusing their labor force in ways that artificially reduce wages), some exceptions are legitimate. However, labor unions and others against open markets and outsourcing often put forth exaggerated claims in these areas as a smokescreen for the unrealistic, harmful standard they are really seeking: making trade and outsourcing contingent upon foreign workers in poor countries being paid the same as American workers.

Full disclosure: I'm a management consultant and some of my clients outsource offshore (outsourcing is not the primary focus of my work, but I do occasionally advise on offshore outsourcing decisions). So there is the chance of inadvertent bias on my part. But I truly believe the opinion I’ve expressed above for the reasons I’ve given. If anyone has a different view, I encourage you to comment.

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Real Debate: An Endangered Species

There is a disturbing trend in political discourse in America today. Increasingly, people are talking past one another rather than listening and truly responding the arguments and questions posed by the other. Talking points are reflexively hurled at the other person – often accompanied by labels intended to be pejorative – “liberal”, “lefty”, “right-winger”, “fascist” – to convey that anything the other person says is automatically discredited upon arrival. Neither person stops to seriously consider the possible validity of the other’s arguments, or the worthiness of his/her question, much less to respond directly.

The proliferation of media has contributed to, and perhaps driven, this trend. There are certainly many benefits to the proliferation of media – we are better off as a society and as individuals not being limited to three network news anchors and our local newspaper – and on balance, media proliferation is clearly beneficial. But I lament a negative side-effect: Based admittedly on my anecdotal observations, combined with the empirical fact of the commercial success of partisan/ideologically-focused media sources, it seems that people are increasingly limiting themselves to media sources that only reinforce their current opinions, and, beyond that, that demonize those who disagree. Listeners/readers/viewers apparently do so for the emotional comfort derived from hearing an intelligent, apparently well-informed media figure (host, columnist, etc.) confirming the validity of their opinions, to be sufficiently informed to converse with like-minded friends, family, and co-workers, and to collect ammo for their next encounter with their friend on the “other side” (who must be either not too bright or not well-informed) or a stranger (who must be either an idiot, ignorant, or downright evil). In short, they use media the way a drunk uses a lamppost: more for support than illumination.

I make a point of listening to a diversity of views in the media and in conversations with others. And I don’t mean just listening for the purpose of “knowing the enemy”, but rather to hopefully learn something new, whether it reinforces or challenges my current opinion. In conversations, I pose challenging questions and arguments not to try to “win” an argument, but to draw out the best possible arguments that challenge my view, so I can consider if I should change my view, to get others to consider doing so, or at the very least to better understand and appreciate the rationale for a different opinion.

I’m new to TownHall and I’ve encountered people who are inclined toward what I try to make my approach, and others who tend toward the approach I’ve criticized above. Forgive my lack of humility in making this suggestion, but I encourage the latter to try my approach. It may cause discomfort to seriously consider opposing views and their rationales, and to engage in real discussion or debate over underlying assumptions, principles and logic that may expose some weakness in the foundation beneath your current positions, but I believe each of us owes it to ourselves, to others with whom we engage in political discussion, and to America to force ourselves to make a good-faith effort to really listen to one another and ensure that our views – and the policies we advocate – are based on the best possible information and reasoning.

Of course, if you disagree with any of the above, I’ll be glad to hear why.

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The Immorality of "Corporate Social Responsibility"

It is highly politically-incorrect to challenge the very concept of "corporate social responsibility" (CSR), but the opposite should be the case. Proponents of CSR contend that a business has a moral obligation to "give back" some of its profits to society via philanthropy in one form or another. A truer way of phrasing such a supposed obligation is that the owners of a business must so use its profits. And the most representative statement would be that the management of a business has a moral obligation to divert some of the profits from the owners to such causes, even if doing so is not a good financial investment (e.g., cost-effective public relations), without the approval of the owners or even a sense that the owners wish to forego their income for this purpose.

Unless management of a business has reason to believe otherwise, their default assumption should be that the purpose of the business they manage is to maximize owner (shareholder) weatlh. Needless to say, the business is the property of the owners, and management have been hired to serve those owners, and the fundamental purpose of a business is to generate a return on investment. Management has a moral obligation to abide by the law and by ethical business practices (e.g., not deliberately misrepresenting their products/services, operations, etc. in ways that cause harm, even if doing so is not illegal), but for a manager to take money due the owners and spend it to benefit others at the expense of the owners is not only not a moral obligation, it is immoral -- it is theft. I would liken it to the legend of Robin Hood stealing from rich to help the poor, but even that comparison would be generous, given that even large corporations today have a great number of working class shareholders (e.g., via pensions/retirement accounts), while much corporate philanthropy (e.g., the arts) benefits primarily more affluent persons.

A business conducts exchanges with customers based on agreed prices that are high enough to be worth the business providing the products/services, and low enough to be worth the customer spending the money, and these exchanges inherently benefit both parties (as long as reasonable product/service expectations are met). Why conducting such exchanges produces an obligation of on the part of the owners of the business to sacrifice beyond what it took to provide the products/services is never quite explained. Management of a business should act legally and ethically.  But unless management has good reason to believe the owners wish it to do otherwise,  management  should return the profits in full to the owners, who in turn can make their own decisions regarding philanthropy, and managers themselves can be charitable with their own money, not that of others.
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The Lost Art of Protest

An observation I've made over the last several years is the sharp contrast between the rhetoric of today's protesters and that of Martin Luther King, Jr. Recall MLK's brilliant "I Have a Dream" speech. First, he knew that, to achieve his political goals, it would not be sufficient to preach to the choir, so to speak, but rather that he needed to persuade the masses of reasonable, decent people who either felt some ambivalence over his goals or who agreed with him but did not feel strongly enough about it for it to affect their choices as voters, which was the key to legislative progress. His rhetorical strategy was to establish common ground on shared core values. He invoked the universally revered Declaration of Independence, the principle that "all men are created equal", a principle "deeply rooted in the American dream," making the case that his goals were consistent with that principle, while implicitly demonstrating that opposition to his goals was a violation of one of the most fundamental principles behind the founding of our nation. And, although he did sharply criticize a white governor and others who had violently suppressed peaceful civil rights protesters, he did not condemn white Americans in general; On the contrary, he reached out to them and appealed to their principles, their minds and their hearts. And he warned against "distrust of all white people, for many of our white brothers, as evidenced by their presence here today, have come to realize that their destiny is tied up with our destiny and their freedom is inextricably bound to our freedom. We cannot walk alone."

Contrast that approach with the rhetoric of most of today's protest rallies at which speakers spew venom at those with opposing views and advocate extreme measures. Case in point: rallies calling for an end to the Iraq war, at which one hears screams for Bush's impeachment and signs calling him a "war criminal", and at which everyone who disagrees is branded as evil, an idiot, or both. Another example: A few weeks ago I personally witnessed a protest demonstration consisting of scores of bicyclists riding down a very busy Manhattan avenue through Times Square, in direct, deliberate violation of city regulations. The cyclists spanned the width of the street, creating a large and growing traffic jam of cars behind them. In addition to causing this inconvenience, they created a risk of serious injury to the many pedestrians in Times Square that night, particularly as some of cyclists scrambled to evade police who were seeking to divert them to a side street and stop the mass ride. These protesters not only anticipated this police intervention, they intended for it to occur as a means of drawing attention to their protest. Those who sought to evade police and who, upon being caught, resisted arrest (including kicking at officers) were held down and cuffed by police as the other protesters surrounded the arresting officers, chanting angrily at the top of their  lungs, "FASCIST STATE! FASCIST STATE!" at New York cops who risk their lives every day to protect us, and who were merely enforcing the law as was required of them, and doing so with admirable restraint. This incident was my first impression of an advocacy group of which I had never heard previously. Needless to say, it left me much less likely to listen to the grievances of this group, much less be sympathetic to their cause.  

It seems that many of today's protesters are either completely oblivious to any concept of effective rhetorical strategy, or (more likely) they choose the catharsis of venting and receiving enthusiastic peer approval over the achievement of their goals.
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Political Cover for Fiscal Responsibility

The President, all the presidential candidates of both parties, and just about every Senator and Congressman are aware of two realities: (1) Our nation is heading for a fiscal train wreck over the next couple of decades due to our current debt-to-GDP ratio and the predictable explosion in the entitlement-eligible segment of our population (per current eligibility rules) relative to the segment of workers who face the burden of supporting them, and (2) No politician will propose a serious solution to avert this disaster unless there is an abundance of political cover.

The reason they will not act responsibly is not just because they are irresponsible, but also because they are rational and they know that voters are irresponsible. They know that any serious solution will require real, unpopular sacrifices in terms of substantially higher taxes and/or substantially lower Medicare and Social Security benefits (e.g,, drug coverage, something Congress recently expanded) and/or eligibility restrictions (raising the retirement age by several years; means-testing that would reduce benefits of many in the middle class, etc.).

Congressmen and presidential candidates can talk all day about "eliminating waste" like the infamous "bridge to nowhere", but eliminating such wasteful discretionary spending projects, even if achieved, would barely put a dent in the problem. They can talk about simply "growing our way out of the problem" but that would require growth rates well beyond what economists consider realistic, and the growth argument is often used as a justification for enacting tax cuts or opposing tax increases (such as allowing the Bush tax cuts to expire), despite the fact that even supply-side economists agree that, given current tax rates,  lower taxes result in much lower revenue than would otherwise be recieved (See http://rationalguy.townhall.com/g/bfe10281-94c6-43bb-bf04-33f9eb7800c1). So they either offer unrealistic, painless solutions or they acknowledge in the abstract that we need to "fix" or "reform" or "save" Social Security and Medicare without coming close to concrete, but politically-toxic, proposals. And the result is a perversion of Darwinism: survival of the least responsible.  

As painful as the solutions will be, all agree that the pain will be less if we act sooner than if we act later, so we must provide the necessary political cover immediately. Congress must establish a non-partisan study group (a commission) to develop several alternative plans with various trade-offs among sacrifices in spending and taxation to achieve prudent ratios of debt-to-GDP and unfunded liabilities-to-GDP, using dynamic scoring with conservative assumptions. Then the political fight can proceed over which sacrifices should be made, politicians will be compelled to choose among alternative fiscally-responsible plans rather than skirt the issue, and an informed public can vote accordingly, based on each voter's priorities among overal taxation, progressiveness of tax rates, deductions, investment vs. labor income tax rates, overall spending, budget allocations, etc..

This study group should be chaired by a figure who is highly respected by both parties and the public, such as Alan Greenspan, and members of both parties should lend strong, public support to this group in advance of its presentation of alternative plans.
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Campaign Finance: Expanded Public Funding Is the Cure

Current federal campaign finance regulations are both limited in effectiveness and questionable on First Amendment grounds, and in any case candidates are increasingly opting out of the system since the money they can raise privately exceeds the current spending limits that would apply if they limited private contributions and accepted public matching funds.  Fortunately, there is a simpler alternative that is more effective in reducing the excessive, corrupting influence of money in politics, which poses no threat to free speech, and which would keep candidates within the system. 

We simply need to (1) increase the matching multiple (e.g., $10 in public funding for each dollar raised from a private source), and (2) raise the spending limits high enough to remove the incentive to opt out of the system and depend entirely on private contributions. (There could be petition signature requirements or other means of qualifying as a serious candidate to be eligible for the matching funds.)

The cost would be a few billion dollars each election cycle, and it would be the best investment taxpayers have ever made.  Reducing the influence of large contributors representing particular industries -- and, in turn, reducing or eliminating  the special tax breaks, subsidies, import quotas and favorable regulations that constitute the return on contributors' investments -- would certainly save taxpayers many times the cost of funding the  campaigns, and would do so from Year 1 onward. Not a bad ROI.

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A Conservative Case for Animal Rights

Excellent column by George Will below.  And important that it came from George Will, insofar as persuading conservatives on this issue is conducive to achieving relevant legislation, since many on the right are so turned off by the extreme "left" on animal rights that they don't contemplate the issue and apply their own values to it.

MSN Tracking Image
Newsweek.com

A Conservative Case for Animal Rights

Why, Matthew Scully asks, is cruelty to a puppy appalling and cruelty to livestock by the billions a matter of social indifference?

By George F. Will
Newsweek

July 18 issue - Matthew Scully, a former speechwriter for President George W. Bush, is the most interesting conservative you have never heard of. He speaks barely above a whisper and must be the mildest disturber of the peace. But he is among the most disturbing.

If you value your peace of mind, not to mention your breakfast bacon, you should not read Scully's essay ''Fear Factories: The Case for Compassionate Conservatism—for Animals." It appeared in the May 23, 2005, issue of Pat Buchanan's magazine The American Conservative—not where you would expect to find an essay arguing that industrial livestock farming involves vast abuses that constitute a serious moral problem.

The disturbing facts about industrial farming by the $125 billion-a-year livestock industry—the pain-inflicting confinements and mutilations—have economic reasons. Ameliorating them would impose production costs that consumers would pay. But to glimpse what consumers would be paying to stop, visit www.factoryfarming.com/gallery.htm. Or read Scully on the miseries inflicted on billions of creatures ''for our convenience and pleasure":

"... 400- to 500-pound mammals trapped without relief inside iron crates seven feet long and 22 inches wide. They chew maniacally on bars and chains, as foraging animals will do when denied straw... The pigs know the feel only of concrete and metal. They lie covered in their own urine and excrement, with broken legs from trying to escape or just to turn ..."

It is, Scully says, difficult, especially for conservatives, to examine cruelty issues on their merits, or even to acknowledge that something serious can be at stake where animals are concerned. This is partly because some animal-rights advocates are so off-putting. See, for example, the Feb. 3, 2003, letter that Ingrid Newkirk, president of People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals—animals other than humans—sent to the terrorist Yasir Arafat, complaining that an explosive-laden donkey was killed when used in a Jerusalem massacre.

The rhetoric of animal "rights" is ill-conceived. The starting point, says Scully, should be with our obligations—the requirements for living with integrity. In defining them, some facts are pertinent, facts about animals' emotional capacities and their experience of pain and happiness. Such facts refute what conservatives deplore—moral relativism. They do because they demand a certain reaction and evoke it in good people, who are good because they consistently respect the objective value of fellow creatures.

It may be true that, as has been said, the Puritans banned bearbaiting not because it gave pain to the bears but because it gave pleasure to the spectators. And there are indeed degrading pleasures. But to argue for outlawing cruelty to animals because it is bad for the cruel person's soul is to accept, as Scully does not, that man is the only concern.

Statutes against cruelty to animals, often imposing felony-level penalties, codify society's belief that such cruelty is an intrinsic evil. This is a social affirmation of a strong moral sense in individuals who are not vicious. It is the sense that even though the law can regard an individual's animal as the individual's property, there nevertheless are certain things the individual cannot do to that property. Which means it is property with a difference.

The difference is the capacity for enjoyment and suffering. So why, Scully asks, is cruelty to a puppy appalling and cruelty to livestock by the billions a matter of social indifference? There cannot be any intrinsic difference of worth between a puppy and a pig.

Animal suffering on a vast scale should, he says, be a serious issue of public policy. He does not want to take away your BLT; he does not propose to end livestock farming. He does propose a Humane Farming Act to apply to corporate farmers the elementary standards of animal husbandry and veterinary ethics: "We cannot just take from these creatures, we must give them something in return. We owe them a merciful death, and we owe them a merciful life."

Says who? Well, Scully replies, those who understand "Judeo-Christian morality, whose whole logic is one of gracious condescension, or the proud learning to be humble, the higher serving the lower, and the strong protecting the weak."

Yes, of course: You don't want to think about this. Who does? But do your duty: read his book ''Dominion: The Power of Man, the Suffering of Animals, and the Call to Mercy." Scully, a conservative and hence a realist, knows that man is not only a rational creature but a rationalizing creature, putting his intellectual nimbleness in the service of his desires. But refraining from cruelty is an objective obligation. And as Scully says, ''If reason and morality are what set humans apart from animals, then reason and morality must always guide us in how we treat them."

You were warned not to read this. Have a nice day.

URL: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/8525632/site/newsweek/

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Political Glossary

 
Guide to Political Terms and Phrases
User Term or Phrase Intended Meaning Actual Meaning Political Objective
Democrats Government funded No one will have to pay for it. Taxpayer funded Government confiscation and transfer of wealth from some Americans to others.
Democrats Working Americans Americans who were not born so obscenely wealthy that they have never had to work, and who therefore work but do not earn much more than the nation's median income (presumably, anyone earning more must not be "working") All Americans who work to make a living. Government confiscation and transfer of wealth from some Americans to others.
Democrats Fair Trade The principle that other nations shouldn't be allowed to cheat American workers out of a job. [Per Democratic usage] The principle that businesses should not be able to give jobs to desperately poor people abroad unless they pay them wages comparable to those of middle class Americans. Preventing Americans from losing jobs to dirt-poor people abroad who need the jobs even more (and, for politicians, gaining union campaign money and votes).
Democrats Undocumented Immigrants People who came here by creative, unconventional means. Illegal immigrants (unless a bureaucrat has simply misplaced the paperwork). Get Latino votes.
Democrats Equal Opportunity Prevention or correction of racial discrimination in employment and education. [per Democratic usage] Technically, affirmative action. More descriptively, racial preferences, or, from the standpoint of the non-preferred, racial discrimination. (Winner of the Orwell Award) For African-Americans, an opportunity to gain an advantage by being judged "by the color of their skin rather than the content of their character" (MLK). For Democratic politicians, gain African-American votes. For anyone else, avoid being labeled a racist.
Democrats Universal Healthcare Equal healthcare rights for all Americans. Taxpayer-funded healthcare for anyone not othewise covered. (To be paid for using money recovered by allowing the Bush tax cuts to expire, money that will be used a second time to fund entitlement liabilities and a third time to reduce the deficit to restore fiscal responsibility.) Government confiscation and transfer of wealth from middle-class and wealthy Americans to lower-income Americans.
Democrats Progressive A person who prefers enlightenment over ignorance and and improvement over the status quo. Liberal Offer a more palatable word than "liberal" to centrist Americans.
Democrats Redeploying troops from Iraq We're leaving but not quitting. Withdrawing troops from Iraq Get our troops out of Iraq and making it sound like just a different military strategy.
Democrats Iraq Plan Just leave and the pain will stop. [per Democratic usage] Just leave regardless of whether or not staying would be likely to affect the ultimate outcome (i.e., avert or mitigate the consequences of full-scale civil war). (See antonym in "Republicans" section) Use the Iraq issue to retain and increase power in Congress and to take back the White House.
Democrats United Nations An organization in which nations work together in good faith to seek peace and justice for all. Individual nations pursuing individual interests in the same building, claiming at all times to be acting on principle. Other acceptable definition: global auction house in which votes are purchased if the price is right. Emasculate our foreign policy so we can feel less hated abroad.
Democrats Hillary Clinton Principled statesperson who puts our nation's well-being above personal political ambition. Whatever the polls and consultants tell Hillary Clinton she should be today. Elect Hillary.
Democrats Barak Obama The man who can transform our nation's politics and rescue us from partisanship. A very intelligent, articulate, good-looking politician with only 2 years of political experience at the national level, no executive experience in government or business, a relatively short adulthood so far, and whose positions on the issues few people know, but who is nevertheless favored by a significant portion of Democrats to be our next president. Elect a Democrat who is less phony than Hillary.
Democrats Dennis Kucinich Standard-bearer of liberal idealism. User of political fame to achieve the widest gap in looks between wife and non-rich husband in the history of marriage. (Beauty & the Leprechaun) Mission accomplished. So clever it almost makes me want to vote for the guy.
Democrats Pro-Choice Supporter of liberty and privacy. Supporter of abortion legality, regardless of whether or not the fetus is a human being. Keep abortion legal and unrestricted.
Republicans Values The core codes of conduct that distinguish good people from bad and which keep our culture and nation from unraveling. [Per Republican usage] Evangelical sexual mores and the need to legislate curbs on individual rights accordingly -- not to be confused with frivolous concepts such as integrity, courage, loyalty, kindness, compassion, industriousness, self-sacrifice, tolerance, or fairness, all of which are apparently outside the scope of values. Get as many Americans as possible to become or stay fundamentalist Christians.
Republicans Protecting Marriage Keep homosexuals from denigrating your marriage by equating it with their perversion. [Per Republican usage] Denying homosexuals equal marriage rights. (How gay marriage threatens heterosexual marriage is left to the imagination. Note: This term is not to be confused with a non-existent mass effort to reduce our 50% divorce rate by placing more legal obstacles to divorce, which would fit the term much better but as of now is entirely theoretical.) Prevent/reverse legality of same-sex marriages.
Republicans Opposing "Special Rights" [for homosexuals] Opposing Superior Rights Opposing Equal Rights Prevent homosexuals from gaining equal rights,  and win elections by stoking bigotry and baseless moral condescension.
Republicans The 2nd Amendment Your fundamental, constitutionally guaranteed right to bear arms for fun, protection, and to keep the government from getting too powerful by maintaining the threat of insurrection. The right for individuals to bear arms for the purpose of serving in a well-regulated militia (or modern counterpart) to defend the nation or defend a state from the federal government. ("A well regulated militia being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the People to keep and bear arms, shall not be infringed.") Miminize restrictions on weapon ownership, regardless of any consequences. For politicians, get campaign contributions from the NRA and win rural male votes.
Republicans Terror Alert / Elevation of Threat Level (archaic term: last heard in 2004) Message from the Dept. of Homeland Security: Don't do anything, but get scared, and vote for the guy who seems most likely to kill someone to protect you. (Not heard since the 2004 Bush re-election.) Unknown. 2004: Get Bush re-elected, along with as many Republicans as possible.
Republicans Support our troops Support our plan for the war and continue funding it, unless you want to get our most patriotic Americans killed. Appreciate the service of our troops, make sure they have what they need to do their job, take care of them when they get home, and don't keep them in a war unless we have a damn good reason. Keep the troops in Iraq
Republicans Iraq Plan Stay and we will prevail. [per Republican/Lieberman usage] Stay regardless of whether or not it is likely to affect the ultimate outcome (i.e., avert or mitigate the consequences of full-scale civil war). (See antonym in "Democrats" section) Stay long enough for Democrats to force a withdrawal so they can be blamed for "losing Iraq".
Republicans Patriot Act You're either with us or with the terrorists…and we'll know based on your support or opposition of this law. Expanded Government Eavesdropping Law. (Will any politician who wants to scale it back need to introduce a "Treason Bill"?) Sacrifice civil liberties to reduce the risk of terrorism.
Republicans Mistakes have been made [in Iraq] Some anonymous third person screwed up. I made mistakes (big mistakes). Avoid blame.
Republicans Death Tax The moral equivalent of grave-robbing. Technically, the estate tax. More descriptively, the inheritance tax, almost all of which affects wealthy beneficiaries. Government confiscation and transfer wealth from the middle class to the wealthy. (“Death tax” is useful for those who wish to repeal it because death is the only thing most people oppose more than paying more taxes so wealthy people can start inheriting estates tax-free.)
Republicans Consistent, pervasive liberal media bias The brainwashing conspiracy that is the only reason you have any negative opinion of any Republican or his/her positions. Selective anecdotal evidence of what are arguably individual cases of liberal bias. (Note: Cases of bias to the right constitute "fair & balanced" reporting.) Scapegoat every Republican defeat (and encourage listenership of right wing radio and viewership of Fox News)
Republicans School Prayer Religious freedom (see also "Values" above) [per Republican usage] A law that would force a public school teacher to coerce public schoolchildren to recite a prayer written by politicians and/or bureaucrats. (Not to be confused with the act of praying in school, which anyone can already do). Use the intimidating authority of the state to coerce children to worship (specifically, to worship in accordance with monotheism and ultimately fundamentalist Christianity.)
Republicans The Ten Commandments The foundation of our legal system (among other things), worthy of placement in our courts. A list of demands, backed up by scary threats, supposedly provided by an imaginary man in the sky, only three of which relate to crimes, and the first four of which consist entirely of requirements to worship a particular diety exclusively. Use the intimidating authority of the state to coerce adults to worship. Also, use the prestige of the state to affirm the validity and superiority of Judeo-Christian beliefs.
Republicans Flag-burning A threat to the nation so grave that we should amend the constitution to override the First Amendment. A form of unpopular political expression, which the First Amendment was created to protect. Revoke our freedom in order to protect our ultimate symbol of freedom. For politicians, an opportunity to make your opponent look less patriotic if he/she has more integrity, political courage, and commitment to actual freedom than you do.
Republicans Strict constructionist A judge or justice who is not so presumptuous, arrogant and megalomaniacal as to rewrite our constitution to reflect his/her personal preferences. A judge or justice who will seek to overturn Roe v. Wade. For politicians, a winking signal to Pro-Lifers that he/she will appoint judges and justices who will overturn Roe v. Wade, while leaving Pro-Choicers clueless.
Republicans Tax "relief" Tax cuts are the moral equivalent of helping victims of natural disasters. Tax cuts Tax cuts
Republicans "Rudy" The man who will save us from terrorism through his superlative anti-terror competence. A man with zero foreign policy or military experience who, after the 1993 WTC bombing, located his Emergency Operations Center on the 23rd floor of the WTC (against advice of security experts), who never provided needed communications equipment to first responders, and who pushed Bernard Kerik for head of Dept. of Homeland Security. (Also happens to be the man who would be the ultimate flip-flopper on guns & abortion if Romney had not set the bar stratospherically high.) Get a myth elected
Republicans Mitt Romney Former liberal who has recently seen the light and undergone a sincere conversion to pure social conservatism. The most shamelessly opportunistic and unprincipled flip-flopper in political history. Believed only by the same people who believe that three weeks of rehab "cured" Ted Haggard of homosexuality. Get elected and then follow the polls on every issue closely and act accordingly to ensure re-election.
Republicans Maverick John McCain A man who sticks to his principles, talks straight, and takes positions solely on what he thinks is right, regardless of the wishes of the Republican base and the party establishment. What John McCain was before had a good chance at winning the Republican nomination (before the Straight Talk Express took a turn onto Flipflop Road and then a quick right onto the Pander Expressway). Yet...the most consistent of the top 3 of "Rudy McRomney". Elect McCain
Republicans I'll eliminate wasteful spending I can restore fiscal health without anyone losing anything legitimate (all gain, no pain). The only way I could find anywhere near enough spending cuts to reconcile my stand on low taxes with my pledge to eliminate the deficit would be to substantially cut defense and social security and medicare benefits, but I'd like to win the next election. Get elected by not telling you what you don't want to hear.
Republicans Fiscal Conservative Advocate of low taxes AND fiscal responsibility. [per Republican usage] Advocate of cutting taxes under any and all economic conditions, levels of national debt, unfunded entitlement liabilities and related threats to our future standard of living, who makes it all work by readily accepting all the most optimistic -- rather than conservative -- economic assumptions and forecasts, and who sometimes argues that tax cuts "pay for themselves" (generate higher revenues through higher growth), despite consensus to the contrary among economists, or who contends that tax cuts "starve the beast" (reducing spending by lowering revenues), or who contends both, despite their inherent contradiction. (Not to be confused with a true fiscal conservative, who would be concerned about our national debt and unfunded liabilities and favor realistic analysis and solutions). Tax cuts.
Republicans Tort reform Prevention of frivolous lawsuits that are killing businesses and medical practices, and driving up costs for consumers unnecessarily Limitations on your ability to sue and collect money from companies that you believe injured you, which does protect companies and physicians from frivolous lawsuits, but also also make it profitable for companies to market unexpectedly exploding, limb-tearing and surprisingly flammable products. (Not to be confused with a better pastry recipe.) Rewarding large campaign contributors by limiting their product liability.
Republicans Pro-Life Opponent of killing babies Opposer of abortion legality, regardless of whether or not the fetus is a human being based on anything other than his/her scripture. Overturn Roe v. Wade
Republicans Pro-Life with exception in case of rape Opponent of abortion but with reasonable exceptions. Opposer of abortion legality because the fetus is a human being, which makes abortion the murder of a baby, which should be legal if the mother was raped, as long as the murder is committed before the baby is born, not that the baby is any less of a human being before it was born. Overturn Roe v. Wade. For politicians, gain Pro-Life votes without turning off every Pro-Choice and ambivalent voter.
Both Parties Pork barrel spending Wasteful spending of your tax dollars that I'll eliminate Spending on projects in every other legislator's district or state (In my district or state it's legitimate constituent service) Get elected/re-elected
Both Parties Farm Policy Protecting Farmer Mom & Pop, the people who get up every day at 4am to put food on your table, from sudden, unforseeable, Grapes-of-Wrath poverty. Massive transfer of wealth from taxpayers and consumers to large farms and agribusinesses who make enormous campaign contributions. Also a means of preventing farmers in poor nations from competing in the U.S. market on a level playing field. Keep those campaign contributions from Archer Daniels Midland rolling in. For presidential candidates or senators with presidential ambitions (i.e., all senators), win the Iowa Caucus.
Both Parties In a post-9/11 world… You must accept whatever I say next or terrorists will kill you and your loved ones. We should take terrorism seriously and act accordingly. Get people to accept any war or security policy I propose unconditionally and reflexively.
Both Parties Moderate Arab State An enlightened, pro-Western Arab nation with Western values. A brutal dictatorship that commits gross violations of human rights, mandates an inferior status for women, prohibits free speech, and funds schools that preach hatred and violent jihad, but which is cooperating with us on security issues to a minimal degree and which is managing so far to keep it's seething population suppressed. Maintain our support for Arab dictatorships that keep their people from electing Osama bin Laden, maintain stability for the time being, and keep oil prices from going even higher.
Both Parties Under God  [in Pledge of Allegiance] Phrase historically and spiritually tied to our nation's heritage. Phrase added to the Pledge in 1954 in the midst of McCarthyism and Cold War fears to distinguish us from, and assert our moral superiority over, the godless communists (as if a system of liberty vs. tyranny weren't enough). Use the intimidating authority of the state to force or coerce children and adults to acknowledge a particular diety and tie it to patriotism.
Both Parties Terrorist Anyone who attacks non-combatants or our troops. Anyone who attacks non-combatants. Get Americans to support any war by characterising any enemy as the moral equivalent of al-Qaeda bombers who also pose an equal threat to the homeland.
Both Parties (spoken in a speech) America is the greatest nation on earth. If you love you're country, you should love me, too (since we agree that America is just super). I'm going to insult your intelligence by being overtly and crudely patronizing. Get elected/re-elected
Both Parties Common Sense ______ (as an adjective) If you disagree with what I'm proposing, you must be an idiot or a scheming scoundrel. What I'm about to say is consistent with the emotional, knee-jerk reaction of a mob that has either avoided education on the issue completely or has diligently sought and consumed only information that would reinforce the initial emotional, knee-jerk reaction. Make supporters unlikely to consider altenative points of view, and discourage "undecideds" from rational thought and investigation on the issue.
Both Parties Reform Improvement Change (for better or worse) Support what I'm proposing (unless you have something against improvements)
Both Parties Fix Social Security & Medicare (also "Reform" or "Save" Social Security & Medicare) Ensure the continuation of full Social Security & Medicare benefits while keeping these programs affordable to taxpayers. Substantially cut Social Security & Medicare benefits and/or substantially restrict eligibility further. Sound both fiscally responsible and fully committed to seniors' benefits, and avoid losing electoral support from seniors and soon-to-be seniors. 
Both Parties The Draft An unnecessary sacrifice for members of our society. A means of sharing the risk of getting killed in war equally across all socioeconomic levels. (Opposed by advocates of war who don't want to risk dying for it and opposed by opponents of war who don't want to risk dying even if it would make war much less politically feasible and therefore much less likely.) Avoid pissing off almost every voter.
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Darfur: A Holocaust on Our Watch

Arguments against our intervening militarily in Darfur on the basis that a particular plan would not achieve the objective of stopping or substantially reducing the genocide, and/or that others should do it, and/or that we have higher priorities, and/or that there would be substantial negative repercussions are all fair arguments, but each is debatable, and all must be weighed against our moral obligation to fellow human beings to help protect them from genocide unless we have extremely good reasons not to. We have to examine each of the above arguments, seek ways to mitigate the drawbacks they describe, and then put them on the "no-go" side of the scale. A particular plan does not seem good enough? Well, let's seek to improve it or search for a better plan. Others should do the job? Well, will they, when (after how many more children are slaughtered and women are raped), and how long should we wait for them before taking action ourselves? Higher priorities & potential negative repercussions? Well, if hundreds of thousands of innocent Americans were being slaughtered and raped, and millions forced to flee to refugee camps, would it be a sufficiently high priority to send a few thousand troops and/or bomb military targets from the air? If the answer is clearly "yes", we need to apply our values to the question of why we would be so much less inclined to do so for innocent people who had the misfortune to be born elsewhere.
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Iraq: A Sensible Strategy

It's frustrating and sad to see the partisan, bi-polar debate regarding our continued involvement in Iraq.  Almost all agree, on both sides of the aisle, that the possibility of avoiding an ultimate, full-scale civil war and its potentially catastrophic consequences rests on the Iraqi government making progress toward key political and military/security benchmarks conducive to reconciliation between Shiites and Sunnis. These benchmarks include an oil revenue-sharing deal, substantial reversal of de-Baathification, new elections and constitutional reform to give Sunnis an opportunity gain proportionate political representation and secure minority rights, establishing effective, non-sectarian militiary and security forces, and some reasonable degree of amnesty for insurgents who have not targeted non-combatants. Without making substantial progress toward achieving these benchmarks, full-scale civil war is only being delayed, not prevented. Yet the Iraqi government (which is to say Shiite leaders -- politicians, along with the veto-wielding religious leader Sistani) has made little progress toward such benchmarks.

Many/most Democrats' desired policy and message to Iraqi leaders: We're leaving whether or not you meet key benchmarks. This sends the message to our "friends" there that they can't count on us, so they better focus on winning the civil war. Shiite leaders will align themselves more strongly with (and feel more dependent on) violently sectarian and anti-American Shiite militas like the Mahdi Army, and Sunni communities will be less inclined to reject the Sunni insurgents or even al Qaeda (since “the enemy of my enemy is my friend”). And this policy sends the message to our enemies that they can wait us out, and encourages them to maximize deaths among American soldiers to drive politics toward ensuring or hastening implementation of a withdrawal.

Many/most Republicans' desired policy and message to Iraqi leaders: We're staying in full force whether or not you meet key benchmarks. This sends the message to Shiite leaders that they don't have to make any progress on anything (politically or militarily) and that they can continue using us to fight the Sunnis indefinitely.

My suggested policy and message message: We're staying as long as you start & continue meeting key benchmarks, but we're leaving (or at least substantially reducing our force and role) if you don't. In particular, we're not going to continue policing your sectarian fight in Baghdad if you refuse to try to get your act together. We won't even go after the Baathist insurgents in Anbar. We'll limit our mission to preventing or disrupting al Qaeda operations that could threaten the U.S. (and maybe patrolling the borders to limit infiltration of Iranians and al Qaeda recruits, if that's practical). If, on the other hand, the government starts and continues to meet these key benchmarks and therefore shows promise of producing a much better outcome than if we leave or substantially reduce our role, why would we still abandon them if our continued support is necessary to achieve that outcome, considering the stakes involved (potential genocide, regional war, instability of "moderate" arab states, increased Iranian power, bases for al Qaeda, much higher oil prices, loss of our credibility around the world, etc.)?

As a note, I also favor moving toward greater regional autonomy ("soft partition" federalism as proposed by Democrat Joe Biden and Les Gelb, also advocated by Republican Sam Brownback), but if somehow they can meet key benchmarks without it, that may suffice to justify our continued full support. The Biden/Gelb soft partition idea (a weak central government, autonomous ethnic regions with their own security forces, and shared oil revenues), while it would not be easy to implement (particularly in ethincally-mixed Baghdad) and while ethnic separation conflicts with our ideals, makes intuitive sense to me, at least as a Plan B if reconciliation between Shiites and Sunnis continues to look unlikely (and it already looks like the odds are against it being successfully negotiated, let alone implemented and maintained). Facilitating the separation of Sunnis and Shiites in a relatively orderly way and allowing Sunnis their own security forces to police and defend the Sunni population is better than letting the militants on each side escalate the slaughter of members of the other, including non-combatants who seem to be the majority of the victims of bombings and death squads.

For those who disagree with the above – preferring either the current Democratic approach (pulling out regardless of whether or not the Iraqis achieve benchmarks) or the Bush approach (continuing full support without making it contingent upon achievement of benchmarks), I would pose the following questions.

(1) My understanding from closely following this issue is that the consensus among analysts across the political spectrum is that, if we left prior to the Iraqis achieving key benchmarks (political reconciliation between Shiites and Sunnis and building an effective, non-sectarian military and security forces), their is a strong likelihood of full-scale civil war and, in turn, at least a significant risk of catastrophic consequences including genocide (on a scale that would dwarf the sectarian killing today), a stronger Iran, a stronger al Qaeda (although it can be argued that staying in Iraq is a more effective recruiting tool for al Qaeda, they would benefit from more secure bases in Iraq and my person opinion is that success in "driving the infidel out of Iraq" would be an even greater recruiting tool worldwide than if we stay), general loss of credibility that we need to address other threats (e.g., North Korea, Iran), regional war that could destabilize "moderate" arab regimes, most notable Saudi Arabia, which have large radical Islamist segments of their populations, and a huge increase in oil prices. Do you agree that such is the consensus and do you agree that leaving soon carries those grave risks?

(2) If we stay, do we have some reasonable chance of preventing or at least substantially mitigating the risk or magnitute of the catastrophic consequences listed above? If not, why stay? If "yes", don't we have a moral obligation to stay, either with the current strategy or with some better strategy that would have this effect?

(3) The other assumption on which I believe there is consensus among analysts across the political spectrum (and which I agree with) is that, if these political and military/security benchmarks are NOT met, then full-scale civil war at some point is highly likely.

(4) Which policy is most conducive to the Iraqis meeting those key benchmarks, (a) setting a timeline under which we will leave regardless of whether or not they achive the benchmarks, (b) committing to continued full support WITHOUT making it contingent upon their meeting benchmarks (or at least making a good faith effort), or (c) committing to continued full support as long as we are needed to avoid catastrophe, but contingent upon the Iraqis achieving those benchmarks (or at least making a good faith effort)?

(5) Is there a different strategy, aside from the question of benchmarks, that would be more effective? I happen to think that the Biden/Gelb proposal of a federalist system with great regional autonomy makes sense. It is imperfect: it would face real implementation challenges, particularly in ethnically mixed Baghdad, and ethnic separation runs contrary to our ideals, but if -- IF -- it comes down to a choice between violent ethnic cleansing and relatively orderly separation, the latter seems better to me. So at the very least I think such a policy should be a Plan B if we get to the brink of full-scale civil war. (Of course, I prefer it be done prior to that point.)

(6) If our continued full support is made contingent upon the Iraqis meeting benchmarks, or at least showing a good faith effort, there is the danger that the specific benchmarks that are set (the achievements and their associated deadlines) will be too aggressive to be realistic and/or fair (given our limited foresight, limited insight and the fluidity of the conflict), but does that mean that we should dispense with the idea of contingency on benchmarks altogether or is it possible that we could set benchmarks wisely enough that the benefits of such contingency (assuming you agree with me that such contingency would make benchmark achievement more likely) would outweigh the risk? A related question is: Do you believe that the Shiite leaders – the political leaders in the Green Zone and the veto-wielding Sistani – intend to make a good faith effort to achieve these benchmarks and achieving reconciliation with the Sunnis, or are they just using us to fight (primarily) the Sunnis for as long as we’re willing to do so until an inevitable full-scale civil war.

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Imus, Hypocrites, and The Double Standard

It was astonishingly ironic and hypocritical for Al Sharpton and Jesse Jackson to demand that Don Imus be fired. Did Sharpton quit leadership of his advocacy group after his (literally) inflammatory remarks at rallies against a Harlem shop-owner, whom Sharpton branded a "white interloper," and whose shop was torched shortly thereafter? Did he quit when, following the accidental killing (by car accident) by a Hassidic Jewish man of an African-American boy, he incited a crowd, referring to Jews as “diamond merchants”, leading to the mob killing of a randomly selected Hassidic Jew? Did Jackson quit his advocacy organization after his anti-Semitic reference to New York City as "Hymietown"? Did their followers show them the door? Not only did each NOT quit those jobs, they each felt worthy of running for president of our nation! Reasonable people can disagree on whether or not Imus should have been fired (I lean against it, but it’s not an easy call, particularly given some of his past statements that were even worse), but it was quite sad to see him, after already apologizing clearly and emphatically, groveling to those opportunistic hypocrites, and it’s time to demand a single standard for everyone, regardless of race.

And one more tangential note: A prominent political and social leader said several years ago, "There is nothing more painful to me at this stage in my life than to walk down the street and hear footsteps and start thinking about robbery--then look around and see somebody white and feel relieved." Should a man who would say such a thing be allowed to continue a career as a political and social leader? What would Jesse Jackson say? Jackson, of course, would brand the man a white supremacist and call for the guy's head, except for the fact that that would require Jackson to decapitate himself. Yes, he's the one who said it.
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Romney: Just Too Phony

I find it hard to even consider Romney because I think that, while all politicians opportunistically shift positions to some extent, Romney has made flip-flopping an art form, and has done so on issues of conscience. Regardless of a candidate's positions, his experience or other qualities, shouldn't we have some minimal requirements for sincerity and standing on principle? What would it say about our nation, our people, and what would we tell our children if we elect a man who abandons his convictions (or has none) and tells people whatever they want to hear just to get their votes?

Need evidence? Here's just a sample:  http://youtube.com/watch?v=a9IJUkYUbvI and http://youtube.com/watch?v=P_w9pquznG4
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Obama Reality Check

Time for a reality check on Obama's readiness for the White House. He has almost no experience on issues of foreign policy, national security, or national fiscal policy. He has no executive experience in government or the private sector. He does not even have the benefit of general wisdom one acquires with age. At a time when the U.S. is engaged in two wars in strategically perilous regions and faces the ongoing threats of terrorism, an increasingly powerful China and Iran, a nuclear North Korea and nuclear-seeking Iran, and a looming fiscal meltdown, doesn't America need a president with at least one of the above qualifications?

 

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Media Responsibility: Nailed on Cho, But That's Not Enough

Just a couple of days into the important debate and expression of anger over the airing of Cho Seung Hui's video by NBC, MSNBC, FoxNews and others (which I believe was irresponsible) , a gunman, who was known to have already fired at least one shot, took hostages at the Johnson Space Center. During this hostage situation, the television networks, as usual, aired live video (from helicopters) of police positions on the grounds, which could have been viewed by the hostage-taker if he had access to a television, and which could have cost the lives of hostages and/or police. Where's the outcry over this practice?
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Busting the Myth that "Tax Cuts Pay for Themselves"

Limbaugh, Hannity, Bush, and Cheney repeatedly claim that “tax cuts generate higher tax revenues”, and they cite selective, anecdotal observations of correlations as proof. Of course, it’s the job of economists to conduct serious analysis, using a much larger number of data points to determine the stength of correlations rather than relying on a few anectodal observations, and exploring various plausible causative factors for changes in tax revenues, rather than assuming that correlation equals causation. I decided to check the statements of supply-side economists – economists who were advocates of the Bush tax cuts and who now favor making them permanent – to see if they contend that tax cuts generate higher tax revenues, or even break even (i.e., if “tax cuts pay for themselves”). I found that every single supply-side economist said the exact opposite: they all say that tax cuts from a starting point roughly equal to the rates prior to the Bush tax cuts will most likely lead to substantially lower revenues than would otherwise be received had the tax cuts not taken place. So why would Limbaugh, Hannity, Bush and Cheney persist in perpetuating this myth, particularly when the latter two are contradicting their own economic advisors, as you’ll see below?

To be clear, my point here is not that the Bush tax cuts should not have been enacted nor that they should not be made permanent (although that is my opinion), but rather that proponents of these tax cuts should present the legitimate arguments for them and dispense with the myth.

Some who justify the Bush tax cuts (and tax cuts in general) by falsely claiming that the tax cuts will generate higher revenues also believe that an important benefit of tax cuts is that they "starve the beast" -- by depriving the government of revenues, these tax cuts force lower spending. Leaving aside all the evidence contradicting the notion that the President and Congress can be relied on to curtail spending to avoid or reduce deficits, the main flaw in this combination of arguments is that each contradicts the other. One needs no schooling in economics to realize that the same tax cuts in the same time period cannot both increase revenues and decrease revenues. As I sometimes say, I can't insist that you agree with me, but I can insist that you agree with yourself.  

Minor note: I’ve included quotes from The Economist magazine, which does not necessarily have a supply-side view, and which (I think) is not a proponent of the Bush tax cuts, but which is certainly not a fiscally liberal publication (and by "liberal" I mean in the sense that the term is used in American politics today, not in the sense of "classic liberalism", which advocates free markets and limited government, policies The Economist does generally endorse).

Consensus Among Even Conservative, Supply-side Economists that Tax Cuts LOWER Tax Revenues (except at hypothetical, extremely high rates not applicable today)

My comments are in italics. I’ve bolded key points.

Ben Bernanke, Chairman of the Federal Reserve

Testimony before Congress, Janurary, 2007:

"The general view is tax cuts don't pay for themselves."

Testimony before Congress, April 27, 2006:

The other comment I would make on your issues with respect to revenues -- I've addressed in a recent letter the issue of dynamic versus static scoring. To the extent that tax cuts, for example, promote economic activity, the loss in revenues arising from the tax cut will be less that implied by purely static analysis, which holds economic activity constant.

SAXTON: Senator Reed?

REED: Well thank you, Mr. Chairman. Thank you for your testimony today. And just in line with sort of the question about the effective tax cuts, the former chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers, Greg Mankiw, wrote in his macroeconomic textbook that there is no credible evidence that tax cuts pay for themselves, and that an economist who makes such a claim is, quote, "a snake oil salesman who's trying to sell a miracle cure." Do you agree with that?

BERNANKE: I don't think that, as a general rule, that tax cuts pay for themselves.

Henry Paulson, Current Treasury Secretary for Pres. George W. Bush

Opinions expressed by Bush's current Treasury Secretary during his confirmation hearings in 2006, per article in Market Watch (from Dow Jones).

Paulson: Low taxes key to strong economy

Treasury nominee says China needs to move quicker on currency changes

By William L. Watts, MarketWatch

Last Update: 7:01 PM ET Jun 27, 2006

"I think it would be a big mistake to increase taxes. This economy is growing and jobs are being created," Paulson said.

Paulson rejected notions that tax cuts pay for themselves, but argued that they were nonetheless essential to ensuring economic growth.

"As a general rule, I don't believe that tax cuts pay for themselves," Paulson said, echoing the opinion of most economists. Paulson said the 2001 tax cuts, however, were crucial to boosting the confidence of consumers, investors and top executives.

Full article: http://www.marketwatch.com/News/Story/Story.aspx?dist=newsfinder&siteid=google&guid=%7BB18C218C-3ED7-4514-898C-F7B2D24FAB43%7D&keyword=&print=true&dist=printTop

W. Bush’s own Council of Economic Advisors

The President’s own Council of Economic Advisors concluded in its Economic Report of the President, 2003, that,

“although the economy grows in response to tax reductions (because of the higher consumption in the short run and improved incentives in the long run) it is unlikely to grow so much that lost revenue is completely recovered by the higher level of economic activity.”

The CEA chair at the time was supply-side economist Glenn Hubbard.

Below is From The Washington Post, October 17, 2006

Lower Deficit Sparks Debate Over Tax Cuts' Role

With great fanfare, President Bush last week claimed credit for a striking reversal of fortune: New figures show the federal budget deficit shrinking by 40 percent over the past two years, a turnaround the president hopes will strengthen his push for further tax cuts.

Bush hailed the dwindling deficit as a direct result of "pro-growth economic policies," particularly huge tax cuts enacted during his first term. "Tax relief fuels economic growth. And growth -- when the economy grows, more tax revenues come to Washington. And that's what's happened," Bush said.

Economists said Bush was claiming credit where little is due. The economy has grown and tax receipts have risen at historic rates over the past two years, but the Bush tax cuts played a small role in that process, they said, and cost the Treasury more in lost taxes than it gained from the resulting economic stimulus.

"Federal revenue is lower today than it would have been without the tax cuts. There's really no dispute among economists about that," said Alan D. Viard, a former Bush White House economist now at the nonpartisan American Enterprise Institute. "It's logically possible" that a tax cut could spur sufficient economic growth to pay for itself, Viard said. "But there's no evidence that these tax cuts would come anywhere close to that."

Economists at the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office and in the Treasury Department have reached the same conclusion. An analysis of Treasury data prepared last month by the Congressional Research Service estimates that economic growth fueled by the cuts is likely to generate revenue worth about 7 percent of the total cost of the cuts, a broad package of rate reductions and tax credits that has returned an estimated $1.1 trillion to taxpayers since 2001.

Robert Carroll, deputy assistant Treasury secretary for tax analysis, said neither the president nor anyone else in the administration is claiming that tax cuts alone produced the unexpected surge in revenue. "As a matter of principle, we do not think tax cuts pay for themselves," Carroll said.

Gregory Mankiw

Below is from the website of the National Bureau of Economic Research, “a private, nonprofit, nonpartisan research organization dedicated to promoting a greater understanding of how the economy works. The NBER is committed to undertaking and disseminating unbiased economic research among public policymakers, business professionals, and the academic community.” Their President and CEO is Martin Feldstein, former chief economic advisor to President Reagan.

The author of the paper discussed in this article is Gregory Mankiw, who was Chairman of W Bush’s Council of Economic Advisors and is an economics professor at Harvard.


Dynamic Scoring: A Back-of-the-Envelope Guide (NBER Working Paper No. 11000)

"In the long run, about 17 percent of a cut in labor taxes is recouped through higher economic growth. The comparable figure for a cut in capital taxes is about 50 percent."

Mankiw and Weinzierl note that when the staffs of the Treasury Department or Congressional committees estimate the revenue cost of tax cuts, they traditionally adopt a process known as static scoring. That is, they assume no feedback from tax changes to national income. By contrast, some observers have suggested that tax cuts can generate so much economic growth that they may more than pay for themselves. Most economists are doubtful about either such extreme. The consensus view is that tax cuts indeed influence national income, but not to the extent that they are fully self-financing.

Mankiw and Weinzierl consider the problem in light of a particular theory of economic growth, called the neoclassical growth model. This theory is the most widely taught model of capital accumulation and long-run growth, as well as a popular tool in scholarly literature in public finance. In this paper, they use the model to show how changes in taxes on capital and labor income affect national income and tax revenue. The model yields simple formulas for how the true dynamic estimates of these revenue effects differ from the traditionally used static estimates. These formulas in turn allow for some illuminating back-of-the-envelope calculations.

The authors begin with the simplest version of the neoclassical growth model, but they also consider various generalizations of the model to see which conclusions are robust. One generalization of the model includes an elastic supply of labor, so that hours worked can respond to economic incentives. Mankiw and Weinzierl find that regardless of labor supply elasticity, if capital and labor tax rates start off at the same level, cuts in capital taxes have greater feedback effects in the long run than do cuts in labor taxes.

According to the researchers, the neoclassical growth model and all of its variants indicate that the dynamic response of the economy to tax changes is substantial. In almost all instances, they find, tax cuts are at least partly self-financing. The authors conduct some simple calculations, plugging in numbers that approximately describe the U.S. economy. They find that, in the long run, about 17 percent of a cut in labor taxes is recouped through higher economic growth. The comparable figure for a cut in capital taxes is about 50 percent. This means that the true revenue cost of a cut in capital taxes is only half of the cost estimated with static scoring.

These results depend on a number of key assumptions, which are open to debate. Mankiw and Weinzierl acknowledge that current studies do not afford clear guidance about how best to apply the neoclassical growth model to the actual economy. Economists will need to focus next on evaluating which generalizations of the basic model are the most salient and then on estimating the key parameters. This task, the researchers say, is urgent. In 2003, Congress adopted a rule that requires the Joint Committee on Taxation to analyze the macroeconomic impact of any major tax cut bill before the House votes on such legislation. "One conclusion is impossible to escape," say Mankiw and Weinzierl. "Difficult as it may be, the subject of dynamic scoring should remain a high priority for those economists advising lawmakers on issues of tax policy.

-- Matt Nesvisky

http://www.nber.org/digest/jul05/w11000.html

In the actual report described above, Mankiw states in the introduction:

To what extent does a tax cut pay for itself? This question arises regularly for

economists working at government agencies in charge of estimating tax revenues.

Traditional revenue estimation, called static scoring, assumes no feedback from

taxes to national income. The other extreme, illustrated by the renowned

Laffer curve, suggests that tax cuts can generate so much economic growth

that they completely (or even more than completely) pay for themselves. Most

economists are skeptical of both polar cases. They believe that taxes influence

national income but doubt that the growth effects are large enough to make tax

cuts self-financing. In other words, tax cuts pay for themselves in part, and the

open question is the magnitude of the effect.

(http://post.economics.harvard.edu/faculty/mankiw/papers/dynamicscoring_05-0407.pdf)

The Economist

Jan 12th 2006:

A surprising rise in tax revenue last year has pushed this chutzpah even further. Mr Bush last week implied that the supply-side fantasy might hold after all: tax cuts do pay for themselves. “There's a mindset in Washington that says, you cut the taxes, we're going to have less money to spend,” he noted contemptuously, before claiming that recent experience suggested otherwise.

Even by the standards of political boosterism, this is extraordinary. No serious economist believes Mr Bush's tax cuts will pay for themselves. A recent study from the Congressional Budget Office suggested that, after ten years, up to one-third of the cost of a 10% cut in income taxes can be recouped from higher economic growth. That fraction may be higher for cuts in taxes on capital alone. But it is nowhere near 100%.

http://economist.com/displaystory.cfm?story_id=5389645

July 12, 2006

All told, Mr Bush’s tax policy may have played a modest role in boosting a temporary revenue surge. But that is very different from suggesting, as the White House does, that tax cuts were the main cause or that they permanently pay for themselves. Most serious economists have long laughed at the idea that Mr Bush’s tax cuts raise revenue. Now, it seems, the president’s own boffins agree. Deep in the Mid-Session Review is a claim that the Bush tax cuts could eventually raise the level of GDP by 0.7%, a relatively modest effect, and one that itself depends on the tax cuts being financed by lower spending.

Below is the executive summary of the Congressional Budget Office report mentioned above by The Economist (Jan 12 article).

CBO

E C O N O M I C A N D B U D G E T I S S U E B R I E F

Analyzing the Economic and Budgetary Effects of a

10 Percent Cut in Income Tax Rates

DECEMBER 1, 2005

Summary

Changes in tax policy can influence the economy, and those economic effects can in turn affect the federal budget. Although conventional estimates of the budgetary effect of tax policies incorporate a variety of behavioral effects, they are, nonetheless, based on a fixed economic baseline. For that reason, they do not include the budgetary impact of any possible macroeconomic effects of tax policies.

This brief by the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) analyzes the macroeconomic effects of a simple tax policy: a 10 percent reduction in all federal tax rates on individual income. Because there is little consensus on exactly how tax cuts affect the economy, CBO based its analysis on a number of different sets of assumptions about how people respond to changes in tax policy, how open the economy is to flows of foreign capital, and how the revenue loss from the tax cut might eventually be offset. Under those various assumptions, CBO estimated effects on output ranging from increases of 0.5 percent to 0.8 percent over the first five years on average, and from a decrease of 0.1 percent to an increase of 1.1 percent over the second five years. The budgetary impact of the economic changes was estimated to offset between 1 percent and 22 percent of the revenue loss from the tax cut over the first five years and add as much as 5 percent to that loss or offset as much as 32 percent of it over the second five years.

—Douglas Holtz-Eakin

Director

Bruce Bartlett

Bruce Bartlett “is an economist associated with supply-side economics. He was a domestic policy adviser to President Ronald Reagan and was a treasury official under President George H.W. Bush.” (source: Wikipedia). In 2006 (three years after this article) he came out with a book, Impostor: How George W. Bush Bankrupted America and Betrayed the Reagan Legacy, criticizing Bush’s economic policies of cutting taxes without cutting spending, requiring huge tax increases in the future.

From National Review online, March 5, 2003:

The Laffer Curve is correct in theory — it simply shows that at a 100% tax rate or a 0% tax rate no revenue is collected. Every economist knows that this is true. But of course, we are nowhere near a 100% tax rate — nor were we in 1981 — such that one could expect an across-the-board reduction in tax rates actually to raise revenue. Ronald Reagan never said so, nor did any other responsible economist.

From National Review, April 7, 2003

Dynamic Baby Step
The CBO is improving the way it scores tax cuts.

On March 25, the Congressional Budget Office released an important study of President Bush’s budget proposal. What was novel about this study is that the CBO attempted to calculate the impact of the proposal on the economy as a whole. Normally, it assumes that even large changes in taxing and spending will have no effect whatever on such things as the unemployment rate, real growth in the economy, inflation, and interest rates, among other things.

This method of analysis has long frustrated advocates of supply-side tax cuts. They believe that holding the economy constant when calculating the effects of such tax changes exaggerates their budgetary cost, thereby decreasing their chances of being enacted by Congress. After all, the whole point of a supply-side tax cut is to increase economic growth by stimulating work, saving, and investment.

Some people believe that the inclusion of macroeconomic effects in revenue estimates is some kind of trick to make tax cuts appear costless. It is often alleged that Ronald Reagan played such a trick on the American people in 1981 by saying that the big tax cut that year would not reduce federal revenue. This is nonsense. The Reagan administration always said that the 1981 tax cut would lose large revenues and its estimates were comparable to those made by independent analysts.

Furthermore, supply-side economists who made private estimates of the revenue impact of the Reagan tax cut — estimates that did incorporate growth effects — also showed large revenue losses. For example, an estimate by economist Norman Ture of an early version of the Reagan plan showed large net revenue losses even 10 years after enactment. Economist Michael Evans came to similar conclusions.

What supply-siders always said is that the Reagan tax cut would not lose as much revenue as conventional (static) estimates predict. Economist Lawrence Lindsey, then at Harvard, concluded that when all was said and done the net revenue loss from the 1981 tax cut was about a third less than official estimates predicted. A CBO study found that it was about 25% less.

Supply-siders believe that a dynamic analysis of President Bush’s tax plan would show approximately the same thing — that the net revenue loss will be between 25% and 33% less than a static estimate would show.

Unfortunately, because of political and bureaucratic resistance, techniques for calculating the dynamic effect of tax cuts are not very far along. So the new CBO effort must be viewed as very preliminary. Nevertheless, it does support basic supply-side theory. It shows that marginal tax-rate reductions will increase aggregate hours worked, and that elimination of the double taxation of corporate profits will increase investment and productivity.

Because supply-side theory is not yet well understood at the CBO, some of the mathematical models used to estimate the effects of President Bush’s proposal are rather primitive. And some of the assumptions that the CBO made are quite unrealistic. However, under the leadership of its newly appointed director, economist Douglas Holtz-Eakin, I expect that the analysis will improve with time.

Consequently, the best way of measuring supply-side effects may be with commercial econometric models. Corporations use them to calculate the impact on sales of changes in economic growth, interest rates, and other economic variables. These models are based on past economic data and assume that people will behave in the future as they have in the past to changes in economic conditions.

CBO used two commercial models to look at the Bush plan. The best known of them, the Global Insight model (formerly the DRI-WEFA model) showed continuing positive growth effects from the tax cut. A larger economy recoups about 30% of the static revenue loss, it estimates, which sounds about right to me.

One problem with the CBO analysis is that it looked at all provisions of the president’s budget, including higher spending and those tax cuts that clearly will have no growth effect. The higher spending retards growth, while the non-supply-side tax cuts inflate the revenue loss without producing any economic feedback. If the analysis were limited only to the supply-side features of the tax plan, all of the models would show strong growth effects.

From Real Clear Politics, March 28, 2006:

Bush Tax Cuts Don't Pay For Themselves

By Bruce Bartlett

Belatedly, Republicans in Congress have become concerned about the federal budget deficit. But this is making it harder for them to find the votes to extend previously enacted tax cuts, some of which expire in 2008, and all which disappear after 2010. Tax-cut supporters are now arguing that failure to extend the tax cuts will actually cause revenues to fall, thereby defeating the goal of deficit reduction.

As the Wall Street Journal put it on March 23, "The revenue data are further proof of the success of the Bush tax cuts of 2003. The fastest way to stop this revenue windfall, and blow an even larger hole in the deficit, would be to fail to extend the 15-percent tax rate on capital gains and dividends through 2010, thus assuring a huge tax increase after 2008."

The flip side of this argument is that the 2003 tax cuts are said to be raising federal revenue because of a Laffer-curve effect. The Journal cited the "astonishing" 14.6-percent increase in federal revenue in 2005 over 2004, which it rounded up to 15 percent. It also noted that revenues in the first five months of fiscal year 2006, which began last Oct. 1, are up 10.3 percent over the same period in fiscal year 2005. No other evidence was offered.

But how likely is it that the Laffer curve is causing revenues to rise, as opposed to normal operation of the business cycle? Not much, in my opinion.

First of all, the Laffer curve came to prominence during a period when the top tax rate on dividends was 70 percent, and the rate on long-term capital gains was 40 percent. Economist Arthur Laffer correctly pointed out that a 100 percent tax rate would raise no revenue and that rates close to this would reduce revenue below what a lower rate would bring in. Given the tax rates in existence, it was plausible to argue that a reduction in the top rate and capital gains tax would raise revenue.

However, when President Bush took office, the top rate on dividends was down to 39.6 percent, and the rate on long-term capital gains was just 20 percent -- far below the rates Ronald Reagan inherited. It is very implausible that these rates were in the "prohibitive" range of the Laffer curve, such that a rate reduction would raise revenue.

But even if we grant the theory, how likely is it that the recent rise in revenue owes anything to this effect? Again, not much.

The fact is that it is only in very exceptional circumstances that there would even be the possibility of a tax cut that would so stimulate growth that it would pay for itself. Even the Bush Administration admits this. The 2003 Economic Report of the President (pp. 57-58) says, "Although the economy grows in response to tax reductions ... it is unlikely to grow so much that lost tax revenue is completely recovered by the higher level of economic activity."

Recent academic research suggests that feedback effects would offset only a fraction of the static revenue loss, that which would result from no effect on consumption or incentives. A 2004 study by Harvard economists N. Gregory Mankiw and Matthew Weinzierl found that a cut in taxes on capital might recoup 17 percent of the static revenue loss in the first three years and a cut in taxes on labor could recoup 13 percent. Mankiw served as chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers under President Bush. A study by the Congressional Budget Office in December 2005 found that a tax-rate cut would recoup at most 20 percent of the static revenue loss in the first five years.

Overall, federal revenues are just barely back to where they were five years ago in nominal terms. According to the CBO, federal receipts were $2,025.5 billion in 2000 and $2,153.0 billion in 2005. Revenues fell 1.7 percent in 2001, fell another 6.9 percent in 2002 and fell again by 3.8 percent in 2003. They didn't start to bounce back until 2004, when they rose by 5.5 percent.

Revenues as a share of the gross domestic product fell every year from 2000 to 2004, from 20.9 percent to 16.3 percent. The 2005 increase only raised revenues to 17.5 percent -- still well below their historical average of 18.1 percent of GDP. It seems to me that the normal cyclical expansion after the end of the recession in 2001 has done far more to raise revenue than any Laffer curve effect. Revenues are simply returning to trend, nothing more.

In short, there is very little likelihood that revenues are rising because the 2003 tax cuts or would fall if they are not extended. The case for extending them must be made on other grounds.

Copyright 2006 Creators Syndicate

From the New York Times:

April 6, 2007

How Supply-Side Economics Trickled Down

By BRUCE BARTLETT

AS one who was present at the creation of ''supply-side economics'' back in the 1970s, I think it is long past time that the phrase be put to rest. It did its job, creating a new consensus among economists on how to look at the national economy. But today it has become a frequently misleading and meaningless buzzword that gets in the way of good economic policy.

Today, supply-side economics has become associated with an obsession for cutting taxes under any and all circumstances. No longer do its advocates in Congress and elsewhere confine themselves to cutting marginal tax rates -- the tax on each additional dollar earned -- as the original supply-siders did. Rather, they support even the most gimmicky, economically dubious tax cuts with the same intensity.

The original supply-siders suggested that some tax cuts, under very special circumstances, might actually raise federal revenues. For example, cutting the capital gains tax rate might induce an unlocking effect that would cause more gains to be realized, thus causing more taxes to be paid on such gains even at a lower rate.

But today it is common to hear tax cutters claim, implausibly, that all tax cuts raise revenue. Last year, President Bush said, ''You cut taxes and the tax revenues increase.'' Senator John McCain told National Review magazine last month that ''tax cuts, starting with Kennedy, as we all know, increase revenues.'' Last week, Steve Forbes endorsed Rudolph Giuliani for the White House, saying, ''He's seen the results of supply-side economics firsthand -- higher revenues from lower taxes.''

This is a simplification of what supply-side economics was all about, and it threatens to undermine the enormous gains that have been made in economic theory and policy over the last 30 years. Perhaps the best way of preventing that from happening is to kill the phrase ''supply-side economics'' and give it a decent burial.

It's important to remember that at the time supply-side economics came into being, Keynesian economics dominated macroeconomic thinking and economic policy in Washington. Among the beliefs held by the Keynesians of that era were these: budget deficits stimulate economic growth; the means by which the government raises revenue is essentially irrelevant economically; government spending and tax cuts affect the economy in exactly the same way through their impact on aggregate spending; personal savings is bad for economic growth; monetary policy is impotent; and inflation is caused by low unemployment, among other things.

These beliefs led to many bad economic policies. In particular, they lay at the root of stagflation, that awful combination of high inflation and slow growth that bedeviled policy makers in the 1970s. Based on insights derived from the Nobel-winning economists Robert Mundell, Milton Friedman, James Buchanan and Friedrich Hayek, the supply-siders developed a new program based on tight money to stop inflation and cuts in marginal tax rates to stimulate growth.

As the staff economist for Representative Jack Kemp, a Republican of New York, I helped devise the tax plan he co-sponsored with Senator William Roth, a Delaware Republican. Kemp-Roth was intended to bring down the top statutory federal income tax rate to 50 percent from 70 percent and the bottom rate to 10 percent from 14 percent. We modeled this proposal on the Kennedy-Johnson tax cut of 1964, which lowered the top rate to 70 percent from 91 percent and the bottom rate to 14 percent from 20 percent.

We believed that our tax plan would stimulate the economy to such a degree that the federal government would not lose $1 of revenue for every $1 of tax cut. Studies of the 1964 tax cut showed that about a third of it was recouped, and we expected similar results. Thus, contrary to common belief, neither Jack Kemp nor William Roth nor Ronald Reagan ever said that there would be no revenue loss associated with an across-the-board cut in tax rates. We just thought it wouldn't lose as much revenue as predicted by the standard revenue forecasting models, which were based on Keynesian principles.

Furthermore, our belief that we might get back a third of the revenue loss was always a long-run proposition. Even the most rabid supply-sider knew we would lose $1 of revenue for $1 of tax cut in the short term, because it took time for incentives to work and for people to change their behavior. When President Reagan proposed a version of Kemp-Roth in 1981, every revenue estimate produced by the Treasury showed large revenue losses from its enactment, based on standard models. The independent Congressional Budget Office produced figures that were almost identical.

Moreover, we were adamant that only permanent cuts in marginal tax rates would stimulate the economy. We thought that temporary tax cuts, tax rebates, tax credits and such were economically worthless, and we strongly opposed them.

Today, hardly any economist believes what the Keynesians believed in the 1970s and most accept the basic ideas of supply-side economics -- that incentives matter, that high tax rates are bad for growth, and that inflation is fundamentally a monetary phenomenon. Consequently, there is no longer any meaningful difference between supply-side economics and mainstream economics.

There is no question in my mind that we never could have overcome the stagflation of the 1970s as quickly or with as little pain as we did without the supply-side idea. But supply-side economics has done its job, just as Keynesian economics did in the 1930s. Those who campaign as its champions are fighting a fight long won -- and it is time for supply-side rhetoric to go, with its essential truths embodied in mainstream economics and its perversions discarded for good.

Bruce Bartlett, an official under Presidents Ronald Reagan and George H. W. Bush, is the author of ''Impostor: How George W. Bush Bankrupted America and Betrayed the Reagan Legacy.'

National Review (conservative, pro-tax-cut magazine)

Below is from National Review editorial, June 19, 2006, after boasting about how tax revenues were up due to the Bush tax cuts:

"There is a lesson here, and it is vindicatory of the central claim of supply-side theory: Easing the national tax burden spurs economic growth, significantly mitigating the revenue loss that results from tax cuts."

Did you get that? "mitigating the revenue LOSS from tax cuts." Now, leaving aside their little weasel spin regarding supply-side theory (forgetting that supply-siders frequently claim that tax cuts from current levels [or from pre-Bush levels] would result in revenue GAINS, not just mitigating the revenue LOSS), even these guys, who are as pro-tax-cut as any people on earth, are saying that tax cuts result in revenue LOSS, albeit not as large a loss as others theorize and certainly not as large a loss as static scoring would indicate (the latter is fairly obvious since "static scoring" does not take into account ANY stimulative effect on the economy).

Heritage Foundation (conservative, pro-tax-cut think tank)

Below is excerpt from column by William Beach of The Heritage Foundation, Feb. 2006.

NOTE: His point is that raising tax rates slows growth, which results in a smaller INCREASE in tax revenue than would occur without that slowing effect. He’s still saying that raising tax rates INCREASES tax revenue. If that’s the case, the other side of the coin is that CUTTING tax rates DECREASES tax revenue.

http://www.heritage.org/Research/Taxes/wm994.cfm

Standard models of the economy, however, show that income tax increases are harmful to growth in employment, investment, output, savings, and even government revenues…In short, raise taxes to reduce deficits, and the result will be higher unemployment, a slower pace of economic growth, and revenues that are not rising as quickly as static scoring predicted.

Excerpt below from The Heritage Foundation by DANIEL J. MITCHELL, PH.D. (presumably an economist). NOTE: He’s saying (1) raising tax rates leads to higher government spending because they result in INCREASED tax revenue (with the POSSIBLE exception of capital gains tax cuts), and (2) “pro-growth” types of tax cuts result in less of a LOSS of tax revenue than would be calculated by static analysis (which does not consider the increased economic growth effect. http://www.heritage.org/Research/Taxes/wm992.cfm

Higher taxes encourage additional spending. There is no fixed relationship between taxes and spending. But history suggests that politicians generally will spend every penny the government collects—and then as much more as they think they can borrow without making voters nervous about deficits and the debt. Tax increases, then, almost surely have the effect of loosening the reins on government spending. In some cases, such as the 1990 tax increase, federal spending rose significantly. In other cases, such as the 1993 tax increase, spending grew by a smaller amount. But the long-term relationship of more taxes leading to more spending is unavoidable.

The tax rates/tax revenue downward spiral. If the Bush tax cuts are not extended and the economy is hit by a sizeable increase in marginal tax rates, economic performance will falter. This translates into fewer jobs, lower incomes, and diminished profits, and that means less money for the government to tax. In some cases, such as with the capital gains tax, the reduction in the “tax base” can be so great that the government collects less revenue at a higher tax rate. In most cases, though, the shrinkage in the tax base merely means that the revenue increase will be smaller—perhaps dramatically smaller—than estimated. Sadly, government revenue-estimating models are very simplistic and fail to measure any impact of tax policy changes on economic performance. As a result, politicians will fall into a rut of raising tax rates, boosting spending, and then raising tax rates again when revenues are lower than anticipated. This type of downward spiral already has caused great damage in Europe. It would be a terrible mistake to let America travel down the same path to economic stagnation and high unemployment.

pro-growth tax cuts have a much smaller impact on tax revenues than rebates, credits, deductions, and other preferences. When tax rates are lowered and people have more reason to engage in productive activity, this results in more taxable income. Depending on the increase in taxable income and the change in the tax rate, the actual reduction in tax revenue will be lower than forecast by “static scoring.”

Below is from a February 15, 2007 piece from The Heritage Foundation, describing a recent analysis, and, of course, arguing for extension of the Bush tax cuts (EGTRRA and JGTRRA refer to the Bush tax cuts on income and capital gains, respectively). Note that even they acknowledge a revenue LOSS. And this projected loss would be even greater if the analysis assumed a permanent increase in the AMT exemption amount or indexation of the AMT brackets to inflation.

Dynamic Budgetary Effects of the Extension Plan

Extending EGTRRA's and JGTRRA's expiring provisions has a positive effect on U.S. GDP, incomes, and employment over the 10-year budget period. It also generates substantial revenue feedbacks ($295.5 billion). Ignoring the macroeconomic effects of the extension plan on individual, non-corporate business, and corporate incomes puts federal tax revenues $991.9 billion below the CBO's projected baseline levels over 10 years. Taking the dynamic effects of the extensions into account reduces the estimated revenue loss to the Treasury to $696.4 billion over 10 years.[12] In 2009 and 2010, dynamic revenue feedbacks do not exceed about $9 billion. But they more than treble in size in each of the final 6 years, reaching $56 billion in 2016.

The estimated change in federal income tax revenues would be significantly higher if not for the AMT. The extension plan does not include a permanent increase in the AMT exemption amount or indexation of the AMT brackets to inflation. Without these, an ever larger number of middle-to-upper-income taxpayers will fall prey to the AMT.[13]

Martin Feldstein

Originally published in the WALL STREET JOURNAL

Monday, December 6, 1999

Martin Feldstein

Bush's Tax Plan Makes Sense

…The revenue effect of specific tax changes is of course important if we are to avoid a return to budget deficits. Any sensible estimate of the effect of tax rate reductions on government revenue would take into account their favorable impact on work effort, skill development, risk-taking and other factors that increase taxable income… I estimate that such favorable feedback effects would offset about one-third of the traditionally estimated revenue loss from cutting the top tax rate to 33% from 39.6%.

http://www.nber.org/feldstein/wj120699.html

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