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246 IRET Congressional Advisory 1 (2008)

handle is hein.taxfoundation/iretcgadv0243 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.

October 30, 2008

Advisory No. 246

NEW TAX AND SPENDING PROPOSALS
SINCE THE MARKET MELTDOWN

With financial markets continuing to plunge
since Washington's passage of the financial bailout
package, Senator Obama and Senator McCain have
each proposed additional tax and economic policy
changes that were not included in their original
programs. Members of Congress have been working
on similar ideas. These policies would be temporary
responses to the expected economic downturn
associated with the banking panic. The proposals
might be considered if Congress returns after the
election to pass a second stimulus package. If not,
they could be offered in the next Congress. The two
parties are also offering other stimulus proposals,
many on the spending side of the budget.
Some of the proposals would help people cope
with the downturn, but most would not limit the
downturn itself. Some would make the downturn
worse. Some of the proposals make tax policy sense,
and would be good permanent additions to the tax
code. Most would not. Only one, a proposed cut in
the corporate tax rate by Representative John
Boehner (also in the original McCain package),
would spur growth quickly. The proposals do not
include other attractive and effective options for
growth and damage control, such as extending 50%
expensing and continuing the 15% caps on the tax
rate on dividends and capital gains, or expanding
saving incentives to help innocent savers recover
from the crash in their financial assets.
An ideal tax policy would move the tax code
from an income base, which contains biases against
saving and investment relative to consumption uses

of income, toward a neutral or consumed income
base, under which saving and consumption face the
same tax burdens. We evaluate the tax proposals
accordingly.
Much of Congress and the media continue to
labor under old-fashioned Keynesian ideas about
economic stimulus and the benefits of government
spending and transfer payments. Contrary to that
view, neither tax cuts nor government spending work
by increasing demand in the economy. These
policies have to be paid for either by raising other
taxes, cutting other spending, or increasing federal
borrowing, which crowds out more private activity.
The initial demand effect of these policies is nil.
Government efforts to promote growth work only
when they increase incentives to work, save, and
invest in the private sector, or rein in regulations that
are impediments to production. Higher production
generates higher incomes that in turn generate higher
demand. Supply first, demand second. No output,
no income.
Presidential candidates' new tax proposals
Both  Senators would temporarily  exempt
unemployment compensation from tax.   Senator
McCain would limit that benefit to people earning
less than $100,000. A second stimulus package may
further increase  or extend  the  duration  of
unemployment compensation. Perversely, increases
in unemployment compensation reduce employment.
The higher payments allow people to wait longer
before returning to work after a lay-off. Similarly,

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