Posted on 12/13/2012 7:51:15 AM PST by Kaslin
Note: The following letter is co-signed by 185 of the nation's economists including Dr. Sanjai Bhagat, Provost Professor of Finance, University of Colorado, and Contributing Editor to A Line of Sight. http://sanjaibhagat.com Further information is available from the National Taxpayers Union, click here.
An Open Letter to Congress:
December 11, 2012
Dear Members of Congress:
As the nation approaches the so-called "fiscal cliff," we, the undersigned economists, urge Congress to carefully consider the relative merits of tax increases and spending restraint. Increasing taxes would likely slow or reverse our nation's fragile economic recovery and undermine long-term growth. Restraining the growth of expenditures, however, would help stabilize the government's fiscal imbalance and create a more conducive environment for robust expansion.
Some in Congress have advocated allowing the 2001 and 2003 taxpayer relief laws to expire for some or all taxpayers. Such an action would have a significant, negative impact on the economy. Low taxes can have a constructive economic effect by keeping money in the private sector, where it is far more likely to be utilized for efficient purposes. By contrast, raising taxes would divert resources into the relatively inefficient public sector, thereby curbing potential job creation and economic growth. This effect would be even more pronounced during a persistent slump.
In particular, Congress should avoid raising marginal tax rates on income and taxes on investment, such as capital gains and dividends taxes. These types of taxes most directly and meaningfully affect job creation.
Additionally, lawmakers must resist other destructive proposals that would boost effective tax burdens, such as curtailing itemized deductions for higher earners or imposing discriminatory taxes on energy or other industries. Such policies are merely revenue-raising ploys when executed outside the context of comprehensive tax reform that includes correspondingly lower marginal rates. And like other tax increases, they would serve as inadequate substitutes to much-needed spending restraint.
While some Members of Congress are concerned about the short-term impacts of slowing the growth of federal expenditures, they must uphold their commitment to the American people to address the alarming trajectory of U.S. spending and borrowing. There are more tangible benefits to consider as well: research has shown that spending restraint is superior to tax increases for both deficit reduction and long-term economic vitality. This has proven true in many other developed nations that have implemented fiscal adjustments.
To best foster a strong economy, Congress should ultimately create a simpler system of taxation with a broader base and low rates on income and investment. Simultaneously, it should prioritize government programs and pursue entitlement reforms that bring the budget to sustainable balance. Individuals and businesses are depending on -- and deserve -- greater certainty in policy making that affects their everyday financial decisions.
Sincerely,
The Undersigned (affiliations listed for identification purposes only):
James C.W. Ahiakpor
California State University, East Bay
Donald L. Alexander
Western Michigan University
Howard Baetjer
Towson University
Charles W. Baird
California State University, East Bay
Stacie Beck
University of Delaware
James P. Beckwith
North Carolina Central University
Daniel K. Benjamin
Clemson University
Michael Bennett
Curry College
James T. Bennett
George Mason University
William Beranek
University of Georgia
M. Douglas Berg
Sam Houston State University
Richard E. Bernstein
Temple University
Sanjai Bhagat
University of Colorado at Boulder
Cecil Bohanon
Ball State University
Michael Bond
University of Arizona
Scott C. Bradford
Brigham Young University
Charles H. Breeden
Marquette University
David P. Brown
University of Wisconsin Madison
Lawrence Brunner
Central Michigan University
Phillip J. Bryson
Brigham Young University
James L. Butkiewicz
University of Delaware
William N. Butos
Trinity College
Victor Canto
La Jolla Economics
Richard Cebula
Armstrong Atlantic State University
Dustin Chambers
Salisbury University
Don Chance
Louisiana State University
Kenneth W. Chilton
Lindenwood University
Lawrence R. Cima
John Carroll University
Kenneth W. Clarkson
University of Miami
John P. Cochran
Metropolitan State College of Denver
Michelle Connolly
Duke University
Michael Connolly
University of Miami
Mike Cosgrove
University of Dallas
Eleanor D. Craig
University of Delaware
Wayne Crews
Competitive Enterprise Institute
Ward S. Curran
Trinity College
Lawrence S. Davidson
Indiana University
Anthony Davies
Duquesne University
Ronnie H. Davis
Florida Institute of Technology
Clarence R. Deitsch
Ball State University
Stephen J. Dempsey
University of Vermont
Joseph S. DeSalvo
University of South Florida
Floyd H. Duncan
Virginia Military Institute
Frank Egan
Trinity College
John B. Egger
Towson University
Richard E. Ericson
East Carolina University
Paul Evans
Ohio State University
Frank Falero
California State University, Bakersfield
Eugene F. Fama
University of Chicago
Dorsey D. Farr
French, Wolf & Farr
W. Ken Farr
Georgia College & State University
Price V. Fishback
University of Arizona
John A. Flanders
Central Methodist University
Garry A. Fleming
Roanoke College
Harold D. Flint
Montclair State University
James Forcier
University of San Francisco
Bill Ford
Middle Tennessee State University
Michele Fratianni
Indiana University
B. Delworth Gardner
Brigham Young University
David E.R. Gay
University of Arkansas
Gregory Gelles
Missouri University of Science and Technology
Robert Genetski
Classicalprinciples.com
Paul J. Gessing
Rio Grande Foundation President
Joseph A. Giacalone
St. Johns University
Adam Gifford, Jr.
California State University, Northridge
Otis W. Gilley
Louisiana Tech University
Micha Gisser
University of New Mexico
Stephan F. Gohmann
University of Louisville
Rodolfo A. Gonzalez
San Jose State University
Linda Gorman
Independence Institute
Richard Grant
Lipscomb University
Anthony J. Greco
Louisiana University
William B. Green
Sam Houston State University
Kenneth V. Greene
Binghamton University
John G. Greenhut
Texas A&M University Commerce
Paul Gregory
University of Houston
Earl Grinols, III
Baylor University
Dennis Halcoussis
California State University, Northridge
David L. Hammes
University of Hawaii Hilo
Stephen Happel
Arizona State University
Scott Harrington
Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania
Scott Hein
Texas Tech University
David R. Henderson
Hoover Institution, Stanford University
Douglas Holtz-Eakin
American Action Forum President
Charles L. Hooper
Hoover Institution, Stanford University
James L. Huffman
Lewis & Clark Law School
Austin Jaffe
Pennsylvania State University
D. Bruce Johnsen
George Mason University School of Law
Richard E. Just
University of Maryland
Alexander Katkov
Johnson & Wales University
Peter Kerr
Southeast Missouri State University
E. Han Kim
University of Michigan
Robert Krol
California State University, Northridge
Kishore G. Kulkarni
Metropolitan State College of Denver
Ben Kyer
Francis Marion University
Nicholas A. Lash
Loyola University Chicago
Don R. Leet
California State University, Fresno
Norman Lefton
Southern Illinois University, Edwardsville
Tom Lehman
Indiana Wesleyan University
Tony Lima
California State University
Jody W. Lipford
Presbyterian College
Hong Liu
Washington University, St. Louis
Edward J. Lopez
San Jose State University
Donald L. Luskin
Trend Macrolytics, LLC
R. Ashley Lyman
University of Idaho
Glenn MacDonald
Washington University, St. Louis
Keith Malone
University of North Alabama
Yuri N. Maltsev
Carthage College
Henry G. Manne
George Mason University
Richard D. Marcus
University of Wisconsin Milwaukee
Michael L. Marlow
California Polytechnic State University
Deryl W. Martin
Tennessee Technological University
Timothy Mathews
Kennesaw State University
Roger E. Meiners
University of Texas Arlington
Stephen Mennemeyer
University of Alabama, Birmingham
Harry Messenheimer
Rio Grande Foundation
Thomas Miller
University of Connecticut
Jim Miller
Former Office of Management and Budget (OMB) Director
David M. Mitchell
Missouri State University
James E. T. Moncur
University of Hawaii
Wilbur Monroe
U.S. Treasury Department, International Affairs (Ret.)
Adrian Moore
Reason Foundation
Michael Morrisey
University of Alabama
Andrew P. Morriss
University of Alabama Law School
Ronald M. Nate
Brigham Young University Idaho
James F. Nieberding
Cleveland State University & North Coast Economics, LLC
James. B. ONeill
University of Delaware
Lee E. Ohanian
University of California, Los Angeles
Lydia Ortega
San Jose State University
Donald J. Oswald
California State University, Bakersfield
H. Edwin Overcast
Black & Veatch
Richard A. Palfin
Economic Analysis
Penn R. Pfiffner
Construction Economics, LLC
G. Michael Phillips
California State University, Northridge
Ivan Pongracic
Hillsdale College
Barry W. Poulson
University of Colorado at Boulder (Ret.)
Richard W. Rahn
Institute of Global Economic Growth
R. David Ranson
H.C. Wainwright & Co. Economics Inc.
Farhad Rassekh
University of Hartford
Mark William Rider
Georgia State University
Christine P. Ries
Georgia Institute of Technology
Philip Romero
University of Oregon
Larry L. Ross
University of Alaska, Anchorage
Timothy P. Roth
University of Texas, El Paso
Charles K. Rowley
George Mason University
Paul H. Rubin
Emory University
John Ruggiero
University of Dayton
John Rutledge
Rutledge Capital, LLC
Robert Sauer
Royal Holloway, University of London
Robert Haney Scott
California State University, Chico
John J. Seater
North Carolina State University
Richard T. Selden
University of Virginia
Ann Sherman
DePaul University
Vlad Signorelli
Bretton Woods Research
Daniel Smith
Troy University
Chester Spatt
Carnegie Mellon University
Frank Spreng
McKendree College
Dean Stansel
Florida Gulf Coast University
Craig A. Stephenson
Babson College
Derek Stimel
Menlo College
Avanidhar Subrahmanyam
University of California, Los Angeles
John A. Tatom
Indiana State University
Jason E. Taylor
Central Michigan University
Rebecca Thacker
Ohio University
David J. Theroux
The Independent Institute
Wade L. Thomas
State University of New York at Oneota
Richard Timberlake
University of Chicago
Stephen A. Tolbert
Montgomery County Community College
David G. Tuerck
Suffolk University
Grace-Marie Turner
Galen Institute President
A. Sinan Unur
Cornell University Program on Freedom and Free Societies
Kamal P. Upadhyaya
University of New Haven
T. Norman Van Cott
Ball State University
Richard K. Vedder
Ohio University
George J. Viksnins
Georgetown University
John Volpe
Catholic University of America
Ralph Walkling
LeBow College, Drexel University
Alan Rufus Waters
California State University, Fresno
Paul W. Wilson
Clemson University
Michael K. Wohlgenant
North Carolina State University
Gary Wolfram
Hillsdale College
Frank Wykoff
Pomona College
Thomas L. Wyrick
Missouri State University
Joseph Zoric
Franciscan University of Steubenville
Robert Niehaus
President, Robert Niehaus, Inc.
(signature consent received after date of letter's release)
how about the obamacare tax hikes? are they ok?
Watch for a ping from me
Since when does Ubama NOT want to inflict “economic damage?”
The fiscal cliff has risks economic damage.
Damn straight it does,
Doing what Obama wants poses even greater risks.
Go over the cliff.
“The fiscal cliff has risks economic damage.”
We already have economic damage... 100s of new regs and rules every day.
I agree, go over the cliff make everyone feel the pain, and in particular Obama voters on the east and west coast.
If the poor and lower middle class feel more pain maybe they will get jobs. This will help us more in 2016 than anything else. More taxpayers.
Economic damage is what 0bama wants. Cloward/Piven and irreversible debt. So far, it’s worked brilliantly.
Let it burn.
Cloward-Piven is a two way street.
It’s not a 2 way street after the collapse.
The Marxists want to fundamentally change America.
They prefer a collapse so they can rebuild in their image.
The congress critters and Obama are on the same page, despite all the noise. Their plan is in place and will continue to be in place.
There will be a deal, and it won’t help. We will continue down the slow road to hell. They can keep this up for decades, and they will.
White House to 185 signees. Buzz off. Da king don’t need yo advice.
Obama’s tax hike on those making over $200,000 won’t raise enough revenue to cover 14 days of the current level of deficit spending. These tax hikes have nothing to do with economics, but with Marxist ideals of ending capitalism.
If that is the case, won't the expiration of the Bush tax cuts be a good thing?
And that's exactly why going off the "fiscal cliff" is not a disaster for Republican Congress, that most old and tired political retreads commentators on the left and the right (with the convenient "polls" to "prove" it) are trying to tell us and the weak-kneed House Republicans.
The reality is that this is actually an opportunity: the problem will be much bigger for "conservative" Democrats in the House and the Dems in the Senate (e.g., see Democrats urge delay for 'job-killing' Obamacare tax - FR / WE, by Byron York, 2012 December 13).
Dems will have to deal with the screaming constituents who will be hit with real cuts in the programs, increased "Clinton taxes," and real layoffs by the "evil 2 percenters" (which would happen anyway with Obama's tax rate increases, independent of whatever happens with the other tax rates).
Obama may count on being able to offer the so-called "tax cut" (reverting to Bush tax rates for "everybody but top 2%" but the Republicans can offer "comprehensive tax reform" reverting to "Bush tax cut" (which suddenly will become very popular with the "poor" and even the liberal "middle class" set) and also offer to remove Obamacare's taxes on medical devices (see link above) and Obamacare's 3.8% tax on dividends and capital gains (same rationale as "job-killing" taxes on the "middle-class job creators").
In other words, Obama wants "pain" because he thinks he can get advantage from it, the GOP House can use the same pain to attract enough "conservative" Dems in the House and the Senate to push Obama, because they will not survive 2014 elections.
Political jiujitsu, plain and simple. This is a great opportunity - think what Nancy Pelosi would do with Republican President if the roles were reversed. The alternative is forever cowering in fear for the next round of class warfare.
Irrelevant. Obama’s Presidency is about the media controlling the message. “Control the information, control the people.”
Exactly!
What better time is there to break through the media - when people are actually paying attention, not to the media, but to the people who can actually "feel their pain."
Otherwise the "media controls the message" can be (and,, unfortunately, has been) used to give up on anything, forever and ever.
“In other words, Obama wants “pain” because he thinks he can get advantage from it, the GOP House can use the same pain to attract enough “conservative” Dems in the House and the Senate to push Obama, because they will not survive 2014 elections.”
Let me add, that Obama’s power comes from a weak economy. Dems, like other socialists stay in power by keeping the country poor and giving out entitlements. The Reps must make Obama’s voters feel pain - they don’t vote R anyway, and really two years is forever, in voter memory.
This is a game where we weaken Obama - taxes are part of it. If he is weakened the dems will run against him and Republicans can get us moving again. Congress will always get the blame, but really who cares about congress. Most of us like our Congress person - everyone else’s blows.
And the case is so easy to make that the problem is government spending and that the higher "marginal tax rates" are not equal to higher "revenues" - which is simply the euphemism Progressives/liberals/Democrats adopted to de-emphasize and hide the word "taxes" from the taxpayers.
We had essentially the same "Bush tax cut" rates since 2001. These rates during Bush administration (and mostly Republican Congress) produced the government revenues of approximately 19% of GDP while the government spending was about 21% of GDP, leaving the annual deficit of approximately 2% of GDP with the economy growing at 3.5-4+ percent.
Under Obama and mostly Democratic Congress, these exact same "Bush tax rates" produced government revenues of less than 16% of GDP while government spending shot up to over 24% of GDP, producing a deficit of more than 8% of GDP with the economy struggling to barely reach 2% growth.
Same tax rates on the people Obama and democrats call "rich" and all others, and yet dramatically different picture for the "revenues" and the spending.
Should not be difficult to put it on the charts and show it to people Ross Perot-style, it becomes very easy to understand which side of the equation has the credibility problem.
And according to Heritage, based on OMB and CBO estimates, higher taxes on the so-called "rich" alone won't even produce much "revenue" from them even discounting dynamic scoring and behaviour changes which will reduce that revenue even further and discounting the higher government spending to support displaced / laid-off workers.
Tax Shock (jpg) - (Vast majority of taxes will come from incomes below "top 2%" and Alternative Minimum Tax, rollback of 2% cut in payroll tax, eollback of "stimulus" tax cuts and from new ObamaCare taxes.)
“And the case is so easy to make that the problem is government spending...”
After watching the election and listening to the “average” voter I don’t think polls mean “jack”.
If Boehner was smart he’d simply say no and let Obama and the dems scream and holler. I mean really, who cares, the country thinks he sucks anyway, he has all the power to do the “right thing”, with no backlash.
If the Reps are wrong they will pay for it but so will Obama to a larger extent. If they are right the economy will improve and Obama’s dependency state will weaken.
It’s a win-win IF they do the right thing, and reduce the deficit, and get the fiscal house in order. Next start passing laws to rein in government regulators.
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