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236 IRET Congressional Advisory 1 (2008)

handle is hein.taxfoundation/iretcgadv0233 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 that will promote growth and efficient operation of the market economy.

January 28, 2008

Advisory No. 236

FISCAL STIMULUS OR FISCAL FOLLY?

Fear of a possible recession is leading to calls
for action to restore growth.  But what to do?
Unfortunately, the  fiscal  stimulus  package
negotiated between the Administration and the House
leadership is not the answer.
The House tax plan would include a tax rebate
(up to $600 for single filers, $1,200 for joint filers)
and a child credit ($300 per child) to encourage
consumption spending by individuals1, and two
expensing provisions to encourage investment by
businesses. The revenue estimate is about $150
billion.
The history of tax rebates is not encouraging.
They have not worked in practice (see the discussion
of the Ford and Carter rebates, and the first year of
the 2001 Bush tax cut, below). They should not
work in theory, because they do nothing to reward
additional production. They are merely handouts.
The expensing incentive in the stimulus package
could induce the manufacture of more capital goods
in 2008. However, because it is temporary, it would
not increase the desired capital stock over time, and
would borrow investment spending from 2009.
What does fiscal stimulus mean?
Fiscal stimulus is a term from Keynesian
economic theory for policies that are designed to
increase spending by individuals, businesses or
government.  The object is to raise aggregate
demand if it falls short of the potential output of the
economy.   Either the government spends more
directly to boost aggregate demand, or it cuts taxes to
let people keep more of their income to spend to

boost aggregate demand.
stimulus is measured by
increases the budget deficit.

The magnitude of the
how much it initially

Problems with fiscal stimulus
Problem   one:   the  government
constraint.

budget

Every tax cut or spending increase has to be paid
for, either with other tax increases or by additional
federal borrowing.  The Treasury does not kite
checks.
In the mid-1960's, monetarist economist Milton
Friedman asked, If the government is spending $500
billion, and cuts taxes to $450 billion, where does the
$50 billion tax cut come from, the tooth fairy?
Friedman then explained that the government has to
issue additional debt to cover the deficit. If it sells
the bonds to the public, it is borrowing the tax cut
right back, leaving the public with no additional
money to spend, and, hence no boost to disposable
income or aggregate demand. The process plays
musical chairs with the money, and does nothing to
boost economic activity. (The same analysis also
debunks the idea of a stimulus from higher federal
spending, which must be covered by raising taxes or
borrowing.)
Alternatively, the Federal Reserve might step in
to buy the added government debt, which it does by
creating new money. That would add to aggregate
demand, but the rise would be due to the change in
the money supply, i.e., to monetary policy, not to the
fiscal stimulus per se. The Fed can add to the money

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