 | Happy 10th anniversary, tax cuts! But where's the fruit? TC Daily Planet | By: Dane Smith June 6, 2011
Watch for some ironic hoopla this week on the 10th anniversary
(June 7) of President' Bush's tax cuts, the largest federal income tax
rate reductions in modern history, and which were preceded in Minnesota
by similarly historic cuts in the state's income taxes.
The main
"celebrants" are progressive policy groups who are critical of those
tax cuts, and considering the economic picture of the last decade, it's
obvious why the anti-tax, anti-government zealots are not lighting the
candles. Chuck Collins, an heir of the Oscar Meyer fortune and a key
national leader of several groups seeking to eliminate those cuts for
wealthy taxpayers, makes the case in a recent op-ed that the
"magical'' conservative "one-point plan'' for everything has been an
abysmal failure on every front, except the enrichment of the already
rich.
As outlined in a 10-point analysis published by the Economic Policy Institute,
the Bush income tax cuts were overhwelmingly "expensive, ineffective
and unfair.'' The United States budget went from black ink to red ink
in short order, suffered two downturns and twice as many recessions as
previous decades, and folks in the top 1 percent got 38 percent of the
tax breaks, even as their take of total income and wealth increased
dramatically. And you don't have to take the word of progressive
policy groups on ranking the decade. A recent report by Investors Business Daily ranks the last decade as the worst for private-sector wage growth since the 1930s.
Tax
cuts can have a positive effect on private-sector growth and no serious
liberal economists would argue that tax increases, by themselves, have
zero effect on business decisions. But reasonable conservatives also
know that the right kinds of taxes and government investments in human
capital, research and physical infrastructure are a foundation for
long-term growth. Relatively high income taxes and smart investments
in those business-building goods and services has been Minnesota's
formula for success, endorsed by moderate Republicans and DFLers for
decades.
At the state level, we think one of the most
insightful takes on the subject recently was offered by one of
Minnesota's more prominent local economists, Paul Anton, who in a
recent Star Tribune op-ed suggested that differences between the states
in tax increases and spending cuts have little effect on jobs and
economic growth. Recent articles
by business columnist Eric Wieffering offer similar hard-headed wisdom
on the value of public investments over tax cuts as a business
stimulant.
The case for repealing those trillions (at the
federal level) and billions (at the state level) of accumulated tax
cuts for top incomes seems to grow daily, as federal and state budget
shortfalls escalate.
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