REAGAN WAS ALWAYS FOR STARVING THE BEAST
By Chriss Street
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Ronald Reagan understood that Congress is in the business of growing the size of government. Raising taxes to supposedly cut government deficits is the scam that politicians use to increase their ability to borrow more money to spend. As President Reagan famously said: “The problem is not that people are taxed too little, the problem is that government spends too much.”
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Reagan as a true conservative would have supported
“starving the beast” by passing the “fiscal cliff deal” that the liberals will
forever lament as the largest “permanent” tax cut ever passed in American
history.
Reagan rode to victory in his
1980 Presidential campaign on the back of the 1978 California voter-approved
Proposition 13. The initiative permanently cut the state’s property tax
rate and required a two-thirds majority of both houses of the state’s legislature
to pass for any future tax increase. The popular sentiment that drove
Proposition 13 was that older Californians should not be priced out of their
homes through higher taxes. The proposition’s popularity quickly became
the “third rail” of California politics, an “untouchable
subject” for politicians to try to rescind.
Milton Friedman served as
Reagan’s key economic advisor during his Presidential campaign and for the next
eight years in the Reagan Administration. Friedman understood that
due to the politics of the budgetary process, any attempt to cut a particular program
will provoke intense opposition from a minority and only indifference from the
majority. Friedman thought it was unreasonable to expect politicians to
be willing pay the high political costs involved in cutting spending. He
argued that only after permanent tax cuts, like Proposition 13, will
politicians have no alternative but to cut spending. He reasoned that a
cut in taxes, even without accompanying spending cuts, should not be a matter
of long-term concern for conservatives:
“There is an important point that needs to be stressed to those who
regard themselves as fiscal conservatives. By
concentrating on the wrong thing, the deficit, instead of the right thing,
total government spending, fiscal conservatives have been the unwitting
handmaidens of the big spenders. The typical historical process is that the
spenders put through laws which increase government spending. A deficit
emerges. The fiscal conservatives scratch their heads and say, “My God, that’s terrible; we have got
to do something about that deficit.” So
they cooperate with the big spenders in getting taxes imposed. As soon as
the new taxes are imposed and passed, the big spenders are off again, and
there is another burst in government spending and another deficit.”
True fiscal conservatives
should have been viscerally afraid of “falling off the
fiscal cliff,” because expiration of the 2001 and 2003 Bush Tax Cuts would
have essentially allowed liberals to bring back President Richard Nixon’s
monstrous Tax Reform Act of
1969. After President Lyndon Baines Johnson launched his 1965 War on Poverty spending
lollapalooza, the Federal debt rose 14% over the next five years.
Appalled by the growing national debt, conservatives passed the largest tax
increase since World War II. Besides raising tax rates dramatically, the
Act created the Alternative Minimum Tax (AMT),
which permanently eliminated tax exemptions and deductions as income rose.
But rather than curtailing the debt, liberals leveraged the larger tax
base over the next ten years to increase spending by 95% and the national debt
by 127%.
When Reagan entered office,
interest rates were at 20%, unemployment was headed to almost 11% and effective
tax rates were headed higher as the AMT wiped out middle-class tax payers’
mortgage deduction and child exemptions as their wages rose due to
inflation. When Reagan fought for his huge income tax cut, he was opposed
by liberals and many conservative deficit hawks. But when he ran for
reelection in 1984, the economy had added
5.7 million jobs and the new prosperity was
actually shrinking deficits by generating more private sector profits and
wages.
The “fiscal cliff deal” makes
permanent $350 billion per year, or 82%, of the
Bush tax cuts. More importantly for the future, Nixon’s AMT
and other tax rates also now permanently indexed against any rise in
inflation. There is a $60 billion increase on the top 1% highest earning
taxpayers, but it is the other 99% of taxpayers who are going to be hammered
with $165 billion of new payroll and Obamacare taxes that will be sucked out of
their paychecks each week.
President Obama claimed in his
weekly radio address that the “fiscal cliff deal” reduced the deficit by $737 billion over
the next ten years; but in November he had demanded $1.6 trillion of tax
increase and refused the Republicans’ initial offer of $800 billion.
Ronald Reagan was known as the
“Great Communicator“,
but his real nickname should have been the “Great Negotiator”.
Whether it was movie moguls in Hollywood, liberals in Congress or communists in
the Soviet Union; Ronald Reagan negotiated spectacularly favorable permanent
deals. Reagan would have backed Boehner’s and McConnell’s effort to
starve the beast, because he appreciated that passage of permanent tax cuts
means that Congress have no alternative but to cut spending.
CHRISS STREET AND PAUL
PRESTON ARE ON
“THE AMERICAN EXCEPTIONALISM RADIO TALK SHOW”
STREAMING LIVE MONDAY THROUGH FRIDAY 7-10 PM
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“THE AMERICAN EXCEPTIONALISM RADIO TALK SHOW”
STREAMING LIVE MONDAY THROUGH FRIDAY 7-10 PM
CLICK TO LISTEN: http://www.mysytv.net/kmyclive.html
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