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251 IRET Congressional Advisory 1 (2009)

handle is hein.taxfoundation/iretcgadv0248 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.

February 4, 2009

Advisory No. 251

DEMINT JOBS PLAN

Senator Jim DeMint (R-SC) is offering a
substitute tax package for the stimulus bill. The
DeMint plan would generate about 2.5 million new
jobs on a permanent basis. The improvement in the
economy would start quickly and grow over time. It
would do more than return us to full employment in
the short run.  It would expand labor force
participation, hours worked, and the stock of plant
and equipment on a permanent basis, and leave the
economy larger than otherwise.   The added
employment and income would not only benefit the
country, they would eventually generate additional
tax revenue, which, along with one modest revenue
raiser in the package, would offset the revenue cost
of the proposal to the federal budget. This is in
sharp contrast to the massive outlays and tax rebates
being proposed in the stimulus package, which would
generate no permanent economic gains and would
cost not only their immediate outlays, but would add
to the government's debt and associated interest
payments forever after.
We estimate that, compared to the tax rates in
effect in 2009, the DeMint plan would boost business
sector output by 2.2%, raise total GDP by about
1.8%, create nearly 400,000 full-time equivalent jobs,
and raise wages by about 1.8%.  (A full-time
equivalent job assumes a 40 hour week. Some of
these jobs would be divided among part time
workers, so the employment count would be higher.)
The effects would be far more dramatic compared to
the post-2010 baseline, which assumes expiration of
the 2001 and 2003 tax rate reductions, lowering
investment, employment, and wages. Under DeMint,
compared to the post-2010 baseline, business sector
output would be 8.7% higher, total GDP about 7%
higher, there would be 2.5 million more permanent

full-time equivalent jobs, and wages would be about
6.3% higher. The economy under the DeMint plan
would generate slightly more federal revenue than at
present due to the added output and income. By
contrast, under the depressed baseline economy,
annual federal revenue would be reduced by more
than $220 billion in spite of expiration of the pre-
2001 tax reductions.1
In Stimulus or Bust?, IRET Congressional
Advisory No. 249, we criticized the stimulus package
as passed by the House and introduced to the Senate
for not pushing any of the growth buttons in the
tax code. It would not lower marginal tax rates on
individuals to encourage added work, hiring and
investment by small businesses. It would not reduce
the corporate tax rate or extend the Bush tax rates on
dividends and capital gains to lower the cost of
capital for corporate investment. It does have a
modest but temporary restoration of the bonus
expensing for equipment, but only for one year,
which would not induce a permanent increase in
productive capacity or employment. In short, it
would give people little or no reason to offer more
labor or capital to the production process, without
which there can be no added output or income. The
spending elements of the plan would have to be paid
for either through taxing or borrowing, and would not
add to GDP. They are largely a waste. The stimulus
package, as currently structured, would saddle future
budgets and taxpayers with $35 billion to $40 billion
a year in additional interest, and the taxes raised to
pay that interest would do considerable collateral
economic damage, perhaps another $60 billion
annually in lost GDP.   Even if the package
performed as advertised to shorten the downturn by
three to six months (a real stretch of the

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