Posted on 06/01/2009 5:37:56 AM PDT by SeekAndFind
While reading reactions to Stanford economist John Taylors op-ed in the Financial Times last week, I kept running into the phrase deficits caused by tax cuts; one liberal commentator after another wrote that Taylor forfeited his right to complain about the Obama administrations trillion-dollar deficits when he called for Bushs tax cuts to be made permanent. Some also criticized Taylors arithmetic, arguing that he deliberately or accidentally overstated the rate of inflation it would take to return to a pre-Obama ratio of debt-to-GDP in ten years time. And Paul Krugman devoted his Friday column to the subject of Taylors stated fear that U.S. policymakers will try to inflate away the massive debt they are incurring. According to Krugman, that fear is unfounded.
Krugman also repeated the charge of inconsistency (he didnt mention Taylor by name, but the implication was clear): [I]ts hard to escape the sense, he wrote, that the current inflation fear-mongering is partly political, coming largely from economists who had no problem with deficits caused by tax cuts but suddenly became fiscal scolds when the government started spending money to rescue the economy.
Theres that odd phrase again odd because one could just as easily say that all our recent deficits were caused by excessive spending, and not by tax cuts. Most advocates for lower taxes (including myself) also think the government should spend much less than it does. In other words, we do not have no problem with the fact that policymakers like to have their tax-cut cake and eat it, too. The way Taylors critics characterize the debate makes it impossible to resolve; whether deficits are caused by excessive spending or insufficient taxation depends on a subjective conception of the proper role of government. For instance, a conservative might say that taxation is forever insufficient to pay for the government that most liberals want.
Beyond the philosophical point, Taylor responds that his critics have distorted his position on taxes. I did write a piece in the Journal in November about the importance of permanent tax cuts, Taylor says. But his piece wasnt about tax rates, per se. It was about what kind of tax relief works best to grow the economy. Tax cuts work as stimulus only to the extent that people can count on them to provide greater returns on work and investment going forward. Taylor argued that temporary tax relief was ineffective and that uncertainty over the looming expiration of the Bush tax cuts was hindering economic growth. I was criticizing the Bush stimulus of February 08 and suggesting that Obama should not increase any taxes. Obviously, thats not a tax cut in the sense that theyre criticizing me for.
Keynesians like Krugman scoff at this logic. For them, tax policy is not about long-term incentives. Its about temporarily putting money in peoples pockets in the hopes that theyll go out and spend it, then taking it out of their pockets once the economy gets going again. In his Journal piece, Taylor called this thinking old-fashioned and largely static not adequate to the complex dynamics of a modern international economy.
Keynesians also believe that government spending is the appropriate way to stimulate the economy during recessions, but Taylor argues that these theories do not even begin to explain the spending binge Obama is embarking upon. To turn this issue into a partisan one is quite a mistake, he says. Even if we all agree that you need to have a large deficit this year and maybe next year I dont, but suppose we did no one would say we should have these large deficits five, seven, ten years from now.
As Taylor pointed out in the piece that caused such a furor last week, the Congressional Budget Office projects the federal debt to reach 82 per cent of GDP in ten years, up from 41 percent at the end of 2008. Taylor did some simple arithmetic to show that, without deep spending cuts, taxes would have to go up by 60 percent, or the price level would have to double, in order to bring the debt-to-GDP ratio back down. A 100 percent increase in the price level, Taylor wrote, means about 10 percent inflation for 10 years.
Several liberal commentators picked the relatively inconsequential nit that at 10 percent inflation, with compounding, the price level would actually double in about seven years. They argued that Taylor either screwed up or purposefully fudged the numbers to make matters seem worse than they are as if a doubling of the price level in ten years were not sufficient cause for alarm.
For the record, Taylor says he decided not to get into compounding because it would have distracted readers from that central point. The 100 percent price-level increase is the issue, he says. That will not occur smoothly. You might have a couple of years with 4 percent, 6 percent inflation, followed by the Fed putting on the brakes. You go back down to four, creep up to ten or fourteen. The scenario would be much more like the Seventies.
I think the simple way I laid it out was sufficient, he says.
Taylor says he wrote the piece because it just seems to me this is an important issue and no one is paying attention to it. The U.S. is digging itself an enormous hole, and his concern is that policymakers, lacking the will to raise taxes or cut spending, will try to inflate their way out of it.
It was this last point that Krugman seized upon in his column on Friday. [I]s there any reason to think that inflation is coming? he wrote. Some economists have argued for moderate inflation as a deliberate policy . . . Im sympathetic to these arguments and made a similar case for Japan in the 1990s. But the case for inflation never made headway with Japanese policy makers then, and theres no sign its getting traction with U.S. policy makers now. (Emphasis added.)
Got that? Some economists, including Paul Krugman, think inflation-as-policy might be a good idea. But dont worry, because theres no sign that theyve had an influence on policymakers . . . yet. Of course, the concern is not what policymakers do today, when deflation is the greater concern. Its what they choose to do five or ten years from now, when the bills from the Obama spendathon start coming due and the only alternative to unthinkably high taxes or impossibly large spending cuts involves debasing the currency. Taylor presents a convincing case that this is the scenario were facing, and the largely ad hominem reaction to his piece is a sign that hes onto something.
Stephen Spruiell is a National Review Online staff reporter.
Krugman says deficits come from tax cuts and yet he got a Nobel in economics?
We don’t need Krugman to tell us there’s a misery index.
Studiously ignored by the lapdogs and kneepadders, over six million jobs lost is evidence enough.
Big time.
Watch the reports this week- unemployment over 9% unless obamasoros inc finds a way to fudge the numbers
The msm reporting the newest numbers as less awful.
Don’t you just love it!
What was Gore's for - advertising?
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