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274 IRET Congressional Advisory 1 (2011)

handle is hein.taxfoundation/iretcgadv0271 and id is 1 raw text is: INSTITUTE FOR RESEARCH ON THE ECONOMICS OF TAXATION
IRET is a non-profit 501 (c)(3) economic policy research and educational organization devoted to informing
the public about policies thait will promote growth and efficient operation of the market economy.

April 5, 2011

Advisory No. 274

HOUSE REPUBLICAN BUDGET RESOLUTION

House Budget Committee Republicans, led by
Chairman Paul Ryan (R-WI), have presented their
2012 Budget Resolution. It seeks to accomplish two
goals: avert a debt crisis by slashing projected
deficits; and permit, even encourage, more rapid
economic growth and job creation. It would achieve
the deficit reduction by curbing federal spending. It
would achieve the higher growth by reducing tax
rates and otherwise restructuring the tax system to
make it less of an impediment to production and
employment. The added growth would also assist in
reducing the deficit by raising incomes and the
associated tax revenue.
Why the urgency
The Congressional Budget Office projects that
federal spending will total nearly $46 trillion over the
next ten years under current law. Deficits would be
nearly $7 trillion.  Government spending would
remain above 23 percent of GDP, sharply higher than
the post-war historical levels of about 20 percent
before 2008. Revenues are projected to increase to
nearly 20 percent of GDP, above the historical level
of about 18.5 percent, but still leaving a wide budget
gap.
The portion of the national debt held by the
public (outside of government trust funds) would soar
from $9 trillion in 2010 to $18 trillion in 2021, or
from 62 percent of GDP to 76 percent, a level not
experienced since 1952 as we reduced the debt from
the Second World War. These projected deficits
would leave the budget vulnerable to very large
increases in debt service costs as interest rates return

to more normal levels. Higher interest payments on
the debt would make it even harder to fund other
federal programs. Doing nothing to control the
deficits is not an option.
Why this approach
The country faces two basic choices. Should
taxes be raised to 23 percent of GDP to support a
larger role for the federal government on a permanent
basis? Or should spending be eased gradually to
about 20 percent of GDP or less to fit within current
levels of taxation? The choice is not merely one of
arithmetic. If growth of jobs and incomes is one of
the objectives, in addition to budget balance, then the
choice is obvious. A bigger government means a
smaller economy and a poorer population. A smaller
government means a bigger economy and a richer
population.
Government activity does not add to total output.
Rather, it displaces other production. Transferring
manpower and material to government use makes
them unavailable for other uses. In addition, taxes
create dead weight losses that shrink the private
sector and reduce incomes and employment further.
At higher tax rates, fewer people join the work force;
people in the work force work fewer hours; people
save and invest less, create less capital, and employ
less labor.
Raising taxes to fund a larger role for the federal
government would curb total production and reduce
incomes. Much of the expected revenue increase
would be lost due to a lower tax base. Each dollar

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