March
29, 2006
Stop
Lying About Tax Cuts
Every
good liberal will tell you that low tax rates cause tax revenues to
drop, hurt the economy, benefit only the wealthy and cause skyrocketing
budget deficits. A Wall Street Journal article last week blew a hole in
those liberal lies. The Journal reported that federal tax revenues for
the first five months of fiscal year 2006 are up 10.3 percent from the
same period a year ago. The 2006 revenue growth adds to a 15 percent tax
revenue increase from 2004 to 2005. This good fortune for U.S. Treasury
coffers is attributed to the steady and growing economy, which is
largely a product of the 2003 cuts in income, dividend and capital gains
tax rates.
The
parallel growth in the economy and tax revenues is not a fluke and did
not occur by chance. History has shown us that every time tax rates are
cut, federal tax revenues rise, the economy responds positively and the
wealthy pay a larger share of the tax bill.
Presidents Warren Harding and Calvin Coolidge significantly cut tax
rates in the 1920s, which caused both the national economy and federal
revenues to grow. Harding repealed the World War I excess profits tax,
dropped the top tax rate on individuals from 73 to 58 percent and set
the capital gains tax rate at 12.5 percent. Coolidge further reduced
individual tax rates and inheritance taxes. The Harding and Coolidge tax
rate cuts caused income tax revenues to rise 61 percent from 1921 to
1929. At the same time, the economy grew by 59 percent. Additionally,
the share of taxes paid by the wealthiest Americans grew from just over
44 percent in 1921 to over 78 percent by 1928.
President John F. Kennedy introduced a plan in 1963 to lower the highest
individual tax rate of 91 to 70 percent, and the top corporate rate from
52 to 48 percent. The
Revenue Act of 1964, passed after Kennedy’s death, containted his
proposed rate cuts and
sparked considerable economic growth. Federal tax revenues rose 68
percent through 1968, and the economy grew 42 percent. The share of tax
revenues paid by the wealthiest in the 1960s dwarfed the amounts paid by
the middle class and poor. Tax revenues from those individuals making
over $50,000 rose by 57 percent following the Kennedy rate cuts, while
revenues from those making under $50,000 rose by just 11 percent.
When
President Ronald Reagan came to office in 1981, the economy was mired in
high interest rates, high unemployment and stagflation produced by
policies of the 1970s. Reagan cut the highest individual tax rate in
1981 from 70 to 50 percent, and cut
the lowest rate from 14 to 11 percent. In 1986 he further cut the top
rate from 50 to 28 percent.
Reagan’s tax rate cuts helped produce the longest period of peacetime
economic expansion in U.S. history. Total tax revenues grew by over 99
percent during the 1980s, and the economy grew by an average of 4
percent each year. As we saw in the 1960s, the wealthiest Americans paid
the most taxes following Reagan’s rate cuts. The top 10 percent of
income earners went from paying 48 percent of all taxes in 1981, to over
57 percent by 1988.
The
other lie liberals perpetually tell is that low tax rates cause budget
deficits. History proves just the opposite – that cuts in income,
capital gains and dividends tax rates increase the amount of federal
revenues available for Congress to spend. The only thing that can cause
a budget deficit is when Congress spends in excess of available
revenues, and the president at the time signs off on that spending.
Members of Congress who blame tax cuts for causing deficits might as
well argue that gun manufacturers cause homicides, fast food restaurants
cause obesity and cigarette makers cause lung cancer. Surely no one
would agree with that flawed logic.
Fiscal
conservatives who advocate low tax rates, and even complete replacement
of the income tax code with a consumption tax, can be assured that they
are on the right side of history, and the right side of economic common
sense. Liberals of both political parties who decry low tax rates would
harm our nation’s economic infrastructure, and the poor and wealthy
alike.
Nearly
everyone has a chance to succeed in our dynamic economy, provided that
government does not confiscate their wealth through the tax code. As
former President Abraham Lincoln once stated, “That some should be rich
shows that others may become rich and hence is just encouragement to
industry and enterprise . . . I don't believe in a law to prevent a man
from getting rich; it would do more harm than good.”
© 2006 North Star Writers
Group. May not be republished without permission.
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