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75 IRET Congressional Advisory 1 (1999)

handle is hein.taxfoundation/iretcgadv0072 and id is 1 raw text is: Congressiona
January 4, 1999 No. 75
WE STILL NEED
A GOOD TAX CUT
The Federal Reserve has lowered short term
interest rates three times since late September. On
December 3, central banks of
the 11 European Union nations
moving to adopt the Euro as    [Tihere is dai
their  common     currency     the    Presi
coordinated an interest rate cut.  govewnents
Japan is assisting its struggling  Union and J
banks with a major capital     easing Of mot
infusion.                     ...
central banks,
The U.S. and European      bank bailout,
interest rate reductions were  needed chang
fully justified by declining  fiscal and regi
inflation fears and by the
associated fall in long term
market interest rates on government bonds and other
low risk securities. The central bankers were as
much following market trends
as  leading  them.     The
monetary authorities were also
seeking  to  reassure  credit  If t   U   e
markets that the Asian turmoil
would not be allowed to cause  economies in
worldwide   credit  market     spending auth
problems,   and  to   boost    on the laure
liquidity  in  the  face  of   authorities.
increased nervousness about
holding riskier securities.
Unfortunately, there is danger that Congress, the
President, and the governments of the European

iger-
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states
to
1999,
oritie
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Union and Japan may view the easing of monetary
policy by the central banks, and the Japanese bank
bailout, as substitutes for needed changes in their
respective fiscal and regulatory policies.  The
governments may think, wrongly, that there is no
longer any need to adopt pro-growth tax and
regulatory relief to boost real output and create jobs.
If the United States, Europe, and Japan are to have
strong economies in 1999, their tax and spending
authorities must not rest on the laurels of their
monetary authorities and bank regulators.
The idea that monetary policy and fiscal policy
can substitute for one another in boosting the
economy is a relic of the Keynesian era. The old
Keynesian view  was that all the supposedly
stimulative economic policy tools available to
government -- faster money
creation, higher government
hat Congress,     spending, and tax cuts -- boost
a n d  the     real output in the same way,
he  European      by pumping up spending in the
may iewv the     economy. In that view, if one
policy by the    policy tool is being used to do
t       aese     the job, the others can be left
t  apaese     idle, or even moved in the
i       or     opposite  direction.  For
heir respective   example, it is assumed to be
y policies.       O.K. to raise taxes so long as
the resulting economic drag
is offset by easier money or
higher government spending. The policies can
supposedly be mixed and matched to fine-tune total
spending to raise output just to
capacity,  achieving   full
Europe, and     employment without inflation.
hae   strong        We    now   know   that
their tax and    Keynesian  demand   only
s must not rest   economics  is   not  valid.
the monetary      Monetary and fiscal policies
work on different aspects of
the economy, and work in
different ways. The policies
affect capacity by affecting the
supply of labor and capital and by altering
perceptions of risk. Fine tuning is impossible in a

Institute for
Research on the
Economics of
Taxation

IRET is a non-profit, tax exempt 501(c)(3) economic policy research and educational organization devoted to informing the
public about policies that will promote econornic growth and efficient operation of the free market economy.
1730 K Street, N., Suite 910, Washington, D.C. 20006
Voice 202-463-1400 e Fax 202-463-6199 0 Internet www. ret.org

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