The Bush
plan: A global-scale disappointment
By
Henry C K Liu
This article appeared in AToL
on Jamuary 9, 2003
The whole world has
been hoping for a quick recovery of the US economy to lead it out of
protracted economic doldrums and waiting for the US president to
command the awesome power of his office toward that objective. The
US$674 billion "growth and jobs" proposal unveiled on Tuesday by
President George W Bush indicates that their wait is far from over.
After more than two
years of slow domestic economic growth that began even before he came
to office, Bush unveiled a proposal the centerpiece of which included
eliminating double taxation on corporate dividends (dividends are now
taxed at both the corporate level and the individual level), in a bold
attempt to manage the economic debate in preparation for the 2004
presidential election campaign. Reinvoking dated 1980s supply-side
theories to solidify his conservative political base, Bush's tax plan
proposed giving stock owners $364 billion in tax breaks a year and
boosting the size of the tax cuts already passed in 2001 by nearly $300
billion, but only 15 percent of which would be accelerated to impact
the stalled economy in 2002.
The plan proposed no
financial aid to the financially distressed states and localities. It
offered only minor incentive for capital investment to small business.
Some $64 billion is earmarked to accelerate cuts in income tax rates,
$58 billion to speed up the removal of the "marriage penalty", $91
billion to hasten an increase in the child tax credit, $48 billion to
accelerate the move of lower income taxpayers to the 10 percent
bracket, $29 billion to prevent more people from facing the alternative
minimum tax, and $16 billion in incentives for small business
purchases.
The Wall Street
Journal drew attention to the one-line specification from the Treasury
to give shareholders a potential tax break on profits even when a
company retains or reinvests profits rather than pay dividends. For
every dollar of retained earnings, the shareholder would be allowed to
exclude one dollar from taxable gain at the time the share is resold,
either as income or capital gain. Thus the cost of the
dividend-tax-exemption plan may be much larger than estimated.
The plan proposes
moving up future tax-rate reductions adopted by the 2001 tax cut to be
effective this year and retroactive to January 1, instead of their
original phase-in dates of 2006 and 2008. The government would adjust
income-tax withholding immediately after passage to augment taxpayer
cash flow. Bush would also reduce the taxes paid by married two-income
taxpayers this year instead of 2009 to relieve the marriage penalty and
raise the child tax credit to $1,000 from $600 this year instead of
2010; refund checks for excess payroll withholdings would be issued
this year. It would also move millions of US taxpayers into the lowest
tax bracket of 10 percent this year instead of in 2008. Of the $674
billion package, all but $3.6 billion comes in the form of tax breaks;
these other funds are for $3,000 accounts that unemployed workers can
use to find new jobs. In addition, small businesses would be allowed to
increase the amount of equipment purchases they can write off for tax
purposes to $75,000 from $25,000.
Charges are already
flying from Democrats that the Bush proposal was an unnecessary handout
to the rich that would further increase federal deficits already under
pressure from military spending while neglecting low-income people and
providing insufficient short-term stimulus to boost the stagnant
economy. House Democrats have proposed an alternative plan that would
spend more than Bush would in the current year and spread it more
evenly across income levels but would cost one-fifth as much over 10
years because its measures are temporary. Republicans answered with
counter charges that the Democrats are promoting class warfare.
Congress, despite
Republican control of both houses, is expected to push for a more
egalitarian plan and companies, particularly those in the New Economy
that do not declare dividends, will push for alternative tax breaks for
big business.
Couched profusely in
populist rhetoric that masked it conservative content, Bush described
the $1.35 trillion 2001 tax cut as merely the beginning of his
commitment to lower taxes. He recycled supply-side economics arguments
that tax cuts would actually increase government receipts, based on
Says' Law that supply creates its own demand, which only holds true
under conditions of full employment, which conservatives conveniently
ignore. Without full employment, tax cuts in favor of supply
side-investment merely adds to overcapacity, a current curse that has
stalled the global economy. A preliminary Brookings Institution
analysis of the Bush plan shows that those earning more than $1 million
annually would see their after-tax income increase by $88,873 on
average, or 3.9 percent. Those earning below $40,000 would have average
after-tax income increases of $400. John Snow, Treasury secretary
nominee, stands to gain a tax windfall of more than $600,000 a year on
dividends from his 2 percent stake in the transportation company he
headed before coming to Washington, not even counting dividends from
his holdings in other companies.
Bush aides described
the president as wanting "to think big", opting to continue to press
not just for the new and accelerated tax cuts as counter-cyclical
measures, but for making the 2001 tax cuts permanent. The Bush plan
accelerates everything in the 2001 plan except the estate tax and the
two provisions aimed explicitly at the working poor: one would have
increased the size of the child tax credit that poor families who pay
no taxes could receive as a tax a refund and the other increased the
earned income tax credit for poor married taxpayers.
Under the Bush plan,
only $102 billion of tax breaks would reach taxpayers' pockets in the
first 16 months of the plan. Of that, $20 billion is from the dividend
tax cut, which investors generally would not reap until they file their
tax returns in 2004.
Struggling state and
local governments are disappointed that the expected $10 billion
federal aid to help with budget deficits was missing from the Bush
plan. The states would also lose up to $5 billion annually in dividend
receipts now automatically calculated from federal returns. For many
taxpayers, much of what the federal government gives back, the states
and localities will take away.
The US unemployment
rate in November was 6 percent, with 8.5 million idle workers. Bush's
plan claims it will create 2.1 million jobs over three years, still
leaving 6.4 million jobless three years from now.
It was unclear what
effect the scrapping of dividend taxation would have on overseas
institutional and individual holders of US stocks whose tax bills are
governed by countries' tax treaties with the United States.
While Bush aims to
think big, his tax plan shows that he is wearing his ideological
thinking cap. The US tax system is irrational and unfair. It acts as a
structural obstacle to economic growth. Everyone agrees on the need for
tax reform; the dispute is only on how the tax system should be
reformed.
Yet the US economy
is stalled because of overcapacity fueled by debt, a condition also
found almost everywhere else around the world. And in the United
States, the complex tax regime affects the rules of economic behavior
in unique and peculiar ways that encourages debt. On this issue, the
Bush plan said little.
Bush's critics are
also missing the central issue of fair credit allocation, and instead
frame the debate on whether the rich should get more or less tax relief
than the poor. The real issue is that the government needs to deliver
purchasing power to those who will promptly spend the money consuming
the surplus products the world needs to produce to get out of a
structural economic crisis. Giving money to those who will only invest
it for more productive capacity will only exacerbate the current
overcapacity problem. Yet the ideologies of neo-liberal market
fundamentalism and sound money prevent any consideration for government
intervention on demand management. Market forces as currently
constituted by the existing tax and trade regimes tend to depress
aggregate demand by treating unemployment and low wages as desirable
prescriptions for inflation that threaten profit, even in the face of
global deflation and overcapacity. Thus the economies of the world,
both advanced and developing, are locked in a downward spiral, causing
the global economy as a whole to shrink.
The US dollar is
facing a much-delayed exchange-rate correction, but it is misleading to
conclude that this is the beginning of a collapse of the dollar. A
correction of the dollar up to 20 percent in relations to select
foreign currencies would have positive temporary effects on current
account balances in trade, but it will not solve the structural
problems in world trade. Tokyo and Washington are jointly pushing for a
Plaza Accord type move against China to push up the yuan, on the theory
that China is exporting deflation, a view China rejects. The low prices
of Chinese exports is the direct result of low Chinese wages and land
rents. There is logic in the argument that China needs to continue its
policy of rising wages to deal with domestic deflation. But the Chinese
trade surplus from its export to the United States has a quadrupling
effect on added US gross domestic product (GDP). In other words, for
every dollar of US trade deficit in favor of China, the US economy
registers $4 of additional GDP in value-adding services, such as
marketing, distribution and retail markup, trade and consumer
financing, etc. It is arguable that global deflation is not caused by
any one currency being periodically and temporarily overvalued, or that
competitive devaluation or upward valuation could solve the global
deflation problem.
But for dollar
hegemony, a term describing the undeserved role of the dollar as a
preferred reserve currency for international trade and finance, the US
trade deficit is not much different that that of most of the Third
World. The Washington Consensus, which the United States preaches and
which the International Monetary Fund (IMF) implements, prescribes
combinations of monetary and fiscal policies to deal with trade deficit
that include high interest rates to reflect the real cost of borrowing,
and tax hikes and other austerity programs to dampen demand. But the US
is exempt from such "stabilization" programs because of dollar
hegemony.
Trade is shrinking
because the process of transferring wealth from the poor to the rich
through trade has run dry both domestically and internationally after a
decade. Trade will have to reverse course and begin creating wealth
rather than merely transferring it. The easiest place to start creating
wealth is where poverty rules. In a poor land, even unsophisticated,
simple ideas can create wealth because there is no downside on real
poverty. The reason wealth is not created today in the world's poor
regions is because of the exploitative structure of the current trade
regime. Neo-liberal market fundamentalism never understood that poverty
hurts everyone, not just the poor.
The reason world
trade has been shrinking in the past few years may be that trade as
currently structured transfers wealth from the less developed economies
to the advanced economies, and from the poor to the rich within
national borders, a double-barreled dwindling game. What is needed is
to shift trade from being a game in which every nation competes in
predatory exporting to earn dollars by lowering wages, to trade being a
game to create wealth in all national economies through economic and
human development. This means that trade should be structured to
support economic development to raise wages everywhere, not to depress
wages to compete for larger export share. This means trade incentives
should be focused more on education, health, and social development,
rather than exclusively focusing on low-cost manufacturing. The
advanced economies should export their wealth-creating technologies to
the less developed economies to enable them to create wealth locally
through domestic development, not to export low-price goods and
commodities to enrich the advanced economies. The advanced economies
will have to be prepared to transfer technology and knowledge, forgoing
exorbitantly priced intellectual property rights, accept smaller profit
margins, leaving more generated wealth in the less developed economies,
but because the world economy will then grow faster, even a smaller
profit margin will yield higher profit for the advanced economies.
If the United States
takes the lead in the progressive restructuring of trade, it will
defuse the growing anti-US feelings among the world's exploited poor,
defuse tendencies for destructive terrorism and reduce the need for
anti-terrorism expenditures. The question is not so much the
appropriate exchange value of the dollar or the yen or the yuan, which
is merely a temporary technical misalignment issue. A multi-currency
world trade regime will allow economies to focus more on domestic
development. The exchange value of the dollar is not as important an
issue as the dollar's dominant position as a reserve currency for world
trade and finance, which tilts trade as a vehicle to forcibly transfer
global wealth to the issuer of the dollar, namely the United States.
Nor is it a question of the technical aspects of domestic tax polices.
The issue is the need for full employment and rising wages policies
world wide that would eliminate global production overcapacity. If
government can live with zero interest rates, why is it so difficult to
live with zero unemployment?
The world is at a
very dangerous moment in its history, caused by violent political
fallouts from the destructive economic impacts of neo-liberal trade
globalization. The United States needs to shift direction and help the
world create wealth that is shared more equitably, both within US
borders and internationally. In the end, the US will benefit more as
the leading economy of a more prosperous and peaceful world. That would
be thinking big.
September 14, 2002
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