WASHINGTON — Do my eyes deceive me? It seems that the
Republicans are in danger of losing the debate on cutting taxes.
Some thirty years after President Ronald Reagan proved that tax
cuts encourage economic growth — which enriches us all — glum
figures like President Barack Obama are roaming the land talking
about the apolaustic lives of the very rich and the need to take
their loot so we can all live better. Facts are facts: if you
expropriated all the wealth from the top one percent you would but
dent our national debt, and then where would you get the money for
next year and the year after that? Class warfare is not the
answer.
Nonetheless Democrats make the charge that the Republicans
are defending tax cuts for the wealthy. Bravely stepping forward is
Speaker of the House John Boehner and House Majority Leader Eric
Cantor to say they are not, or that they oppose tax increases.
Every time they leave something out.
In so doing they play into the hands of those who would
prolong this economic slowdown. Thus Eugene Robinson in the
Washington Post cites a Congressional Budget Office study
that found that the income of the top 1% in America grew from 8% to
over 17% from 1979 to 2007. And he claims this shows “why the
Occupy Wall Street protests have struck such a nerve.” He did not
add that high-income earners suffered vast decline in their
percentage of national income from 2007 to 2009. Alan J. Reynolds
estimates that they fell to 11.3% and that the losses suffered by
the wealthy and by the small businesses was nothing to crow about,
increasing, as it did, poverty and unemployment in the nation as a
whole. As for the Occupy Wall Street encampments across the
country, I think the American people are catching on as these
lawless settlements are disbanded. They are perhaps the greatest
concentrations of crime, petty and not so petty, to be found in the
country. From public masturbation to rape, from muggings to murders
— these encampments had it all, and they have yet to come up with
a Mahatma Gandhi or even a Rev. Sharpton. Even the Rev. Jackson is
staying away.
So what do the Republicans leave out in their rebuttal to
the grim Democrats? They leave out that they have an economic model
that is proven. It is called supply-side economics. According to
the model, one does not raise taxes on anyone, certainly not in
times of economic unease. The very rich might be slobs or they
might be living saints, but like everyone else their taxes are not
to be raised because they spend their money or invest their money
in economic growth. They cannot help themselves. The way they spend
or invest is always more efficient than the government. Money spent
by the rich (and the middle class) leads to growth. Money spent by
the government rarely leads to growth, and the following year the
government has to come up with more money again.
Obamacare was sold to a gullible public in part with
delusional claims that thousands of healthcare givers would be
employed by the largess of the federal government. And who would
employ them in the years ahead? If healthcare were paid for by
private means, the healthcare giver would still be working in the
years to come, and they would not be dependent on the government.
Government is not a reliable source of funds. Ask a citizen of
Greece or of Italy.
There is a way for Republicans win the tax debate. They
should say that all Americans know better how to invest and spend
their money than the federal government. Then they should say that
under Obama the government is munching on up to 25% of the GDP. It
should lower its intake back to the traditional 18-20%. No one can
afford a government that consumes 25% of GDP.