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1 Stephen J. Entin, Diving off the Fiscal Cliff: An Economy on the Rocks 1 (2012)

handle is hein.taxfoundation/srcafxz0001 and id is 1 raw text is: TASpecia Reort
FOUNDATION
November 27, 2012
No. 205
Diving Off the Fiscal Cliff:
An Economy on the Rocks
By
Stephen J Entin, Senior Fellow
t troduct Of
Washington is in a dither over the fiscal cliff. The cliff consists of roughly $500 billion in tax increases that
will occur on January 1, 2013 as the Bush-era tax rates expire, along with almost $100 billion in automatic
cuts in government spending resulting from the sequester negotiated last year in the deal that extended the
tax rates through 2012.1
According to conventional wisdom, the resulting drop in government spending and consumer demand will
shock the economy, causing it to slow or possibly fall into a recession. While Americans are right to be
worried about the economic effects of the fiscal cliff, the subject of that concern should be on the
production side of the economy, not the demand side-especially over the long term.
Certainly, we can expect some short-term adjustments in the economy from a cut in federal spending as
people leave federal jobs and projects for other work. But, as Milton Friedman pointed out in the 1960s,
other things equal, a rise in revenue and drop in spending would reduce federal borrowing and free up
saving for others to borrow and spend. There would be no effect on total demand unless the Federal Reserve
were to slow its purchases of government debt in reaction to the fiscal shift, and that effect would be due to
the change in monetary policy, not the fiscal policy by itself.
The real and very dangerous effect of the fiscal cliff is what the tax rate increases would do to production
over the long term. The tax hikes would slash the incentive to produce goods and services in the United
States on a permanent basis (or at least until the lower tax rates were restored). Very quickly, there would be
job losses. Within a few years, there would be less capital for workers to work with and thus lower
productivity gains and commensurately lower wages and salaries.
' See Tax Foundation, The Fiscal Cliff: A Primer, TAX FOUNDATION SPECIAL REPORT No. 204 (Nov. 2012),
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