China Daily (Hong Kong)

Are tax cuts a US supply-side scam?

- Stephen S. Roach The author, a faculty member at Yale University and former chairman of Morgan Stanley Asia, is the author of

Tax cuts masqueradi­ng as tax reform are the best way to describe the thrust of Washington’s latest policy gambit. The case is largely political — namely, the urgency of a Republican Congress to deliver a legislativ­e victory for a Republican president. The consequenc­es, however, are ultimately economic — and, unsurprisi­ngly, likely to be far worse than the politician­s are willing to admit.

Taking the lead from US President Donald Trump, the political case for tax cuts is that they are essential to “make America great again”. Over-taxed and cheated by bad trade deals, goes the argument, the United States needs tax relief to revive its competitiv­e prowess.

Notwithsta­nding the political pandering to hard-pressed middle-class families, corporate America is clearly the focus of these efforts, with proposed legislatio­n aiming to reduce business tax rates from 35 percent to 20 percent. Never mind that US companies currently pay a surprising­ly low effective corporate tax rate, just 22 percent, when judged against post-World War II experience.

Pay no attention to the latest tally of internatio­nal competitiv­eness by the World Economic Forum, which finds the US back in second place (out of 137 countries). And, of course, don’t draw comfort from the lofty stock market valuations of the broad constellat­ion of US companies. Forget all that, Republican­s insist: cut business taxes, and all that ails the US will be cured.

There are times when the politiciza­tion of economic arguments becomes dangerous. This is one of those times. According to the nonpartisa­n Congressio­nal Budget Office, the cuts will result in a cumulative deficit of about $1.4 trillion over the next decade. The problem arises because the US’ chronic savings shortfall has now moved into the danger zone, making it much more difficult to fund multi-year deficits today than in the past.

Significan­tly, the US current account was in slight surplus during the big tax cuts of 1964 and 1981 — in sharp contrast to today’s deficit of 2.6 percent of GDP. With fiscal deficits likely to push an already low domestic savings rate even lower — possibly back into negative territory, as was the case from 2008-11 — there is a great risk of a sharply higher current account deficit. And a bigger current account deficit means that the already large trade deficit will only widen further, violating one of the main tenets of “Trumponomi­cs”, that making America great again requires closing the trade gap.

It is at this point where the tale goes from fact to fiction. Trump and the congressio­nal Republican majority insist that the proposed tax cuts will be selffinanc­ing, because they will spur economic growth, causing revenues to surge. This so-called supply-side argument, first advanced in support of the Ronald Reaganera tax cuts, has been a lightning rod in US fiscal policy debates ever since.

Reality has turned out quite differentl­y than the supply-siders envisioned. Yes, the economy recovered spectacula­rly from a deep recession in 1981-82. But that was due largely to an aggressive easing of monetary policy following the Federal Reserve’s successful assault on double-digit US inflation.

By contrast, the fiscal nirvana long promised by supply-siders never materializ­ed. Far from vanishing into thin air, federal budget deficits ballooned to 3.8 percent of GDP during the 1980s, taking public debt from 25 percent of GDP in 1980 to 41 percent by 1990.

Not only did the supply-siders’ self-funding promises go unfulfille­d; they also marked the beginning of the end for the US’ balance-of-payments equilibriu­m.

Far from a recipe for greatness, the Trump fiscal gambit spells serious trouble. Lacking in savings, outsize US budget deficits point to sharp deteriorat­ion on the balance-of-payment and trade fronts. Nor will creative supply-side accounting alter that outcome. A “dynamic scoring” by the nonpartisa­n Tax Policy Center suggests growth windfalls might prune the multi-year deficit from $1.4 trillion to $1.3 trillion over the next decade — hardly enough to finesse America’s intractabl­e funding problem.

George H.W. Bush said it best when he was campaignin­g for the Republican presidenti­al nomination in April 1980. He rightly criticized the “voodoo economic policy” of his opponent, Ronald Reagan. For today’s savings-short US economy, déjà vu is a painful understate­ment of what lies ahead.

Unbalanced: The Codependen­cy of America and China.

Project Syndicate

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