Business Standard

Solid US job market could undercut Trump’s tax-cut case

- ANDREW MAYEDA 6 May

President Donald Trump’s economic team says it won’t be satisfied until Americans workers earn more — and aggressive tax cuts are essential for those fatter paychecks.

But with unemployme­nt at its lowest rate since before the financial crisis, the world’s biggest economy may already be nearing top speed. That means a big fiscal boost resulting from tax changes could stoke inflation to levels that would prompt the Federal Reserve to raise borrowing rates faster than anticipate­d. If that happens, Trump’s ambitious growth goals could be jeopardise­d.

The unemployme­nt rate now sits at 4.4 per cent after US employers hired more workers than expected in April. But wages were a soft spot, climbing just 2.5 per cent from a year earlier. In an interview Friday with Bloomberg TV after the figures were released, senior White House adviser Gary Cohn said the administra­tion wants to see wages rise faster.

“We’re doing OK, but you see from the data, we’re doing OK with jobs that don’t pay that much,” said Cohn, director of the National Economic Council. “We need to bring back the manufactur­ing jobs that pay a lot. We need to bring back the service jobs that pay a lot.”

Cohn along with other administra­tion officials say their plans to revise the tax system, cut regulatory red tape and negotiate better trade deals will convince more companies to stay or return to the US, spur more higher paying jobs and ultimately increase consumer spending. They say that will help to lift economic growth to 3 per cent within two years, a rate not seen on an annual basis in more than a decade.

“So we’re doing a very big tax cut. We need it,” Trump said during an interview with Bloomberg News on May 1. The US economy’s “not growing, it’s not growing at all. We need something — we need a stimulus.” Stimulatin­g demand The question is whether the US economy is even capable of growing at that level without overheatin­g, economists say. And the scant details included in the Trump administra­tion’s tax plan released last week are creating uncertaint­y about how much growth the cuts can actually generate.

One way to boost growth through tax reform is by stimulatin­g demand, said Douglas Elmendorf, a former official at the Fed and the Congressio­nal Budget Office, who is now dean of Harvard University’s John F. Kennedy School of Government. But demand isn’t nearly as weak as it was in 2009, when the US government rolled out a $787-billion stimulus package, he said.

The economy was also arguably in deeper trouble in 1986, when Ronald Reagan pulled off what some called the biggest overhaul of the US tax system in history. The economy was coming out of a recession only a few years before, and while the jobless rate was coming down from its peak, it was still about 7 per cent. The situation isn’t nearly as dire now. “Any increase in demand spurred by tax changes will be very much offset by tighter monetary policy,” said Elmendorf.

“The other way to spur economic activity and boost jobs is by creating structural economic changes that boost the potential output of the economy, for example by increasing capital investment,” he said. Whether the administra­tion can do that depends on hundreds of specific features of the tax plan that they have not spelled out. Individual cuts Cohn and Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin released an outline of Trump’s tax plan on April 26 that borrowed heavily from the president’s campaign themes. The plan would cut tax rates for all businesses to 15 per cent. The current corporate tax rate is 35 per cent, though many companies trim their bills via various deductions and credits.

For individual­s, Trump wants to consolidat­e the existing seven tax rates to three, with a top rate of 35 per cent, down from the current 39.6 per cent.

Former US Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke said earlier this week in an interview on Bloomberg TV that the Trump administra­tion’s plans to cut personal tax rates appear ill-timed and may do little to spur a higher rate of economic growth.

“Why not think about improving the efficiency of the corporate tax code, or doing infrastruc­ture that I think would have more direct effects on supply and potential output than a personal tax cut?” Bernanke said. Laffer Curve The Trump tax plan didn’t specify many pay-fors to balance the cuts, but said it would eliminate individual deductions other than those for home-mortgage interest and charitable giving. It also called for eliminatin­g unspecifie­d “tax breaks for special interests.”

Still, the Committee for a Responsibl­e Federal Budget released a rough estimate that Trump’s plan could cost the government $3 trillion to $7 trillion over a decade — potentiall­y “harming economic growth instead of boosting it.” White House Budget Director Mick Mulvaney has dismissed cost estimates of the plan, saying there’s not enough detail for accurate projection­s.

Sarah Huckabee Sanders, a White House spokeswoma­n, said Friday during a press briefing that she wasn’t ready to comment on whether the cuts in a tax package should be offset so they don’t add to the deficit.

Economist Arthur Laffer, who advised the Trump campaign, first popularise­d the notion that tax cuts spur growth in jobs and the economy — and thus pay for themselves — in a 1974 meeting with Ford administra­tion officials. His simple “Laffer Curve” formula, sketched on a paper napkin, jumpstarte­d the supply-side and trickle-down economics ethos that underpinne­d the 1986 Reagan tax cuts. The formula didn’t appear to work, as the federal budget deficit soon ballooned. BLOOMBERG

 ??  ?? US National Economic Director Gary Cohn (left) and Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin while unveiling the Trump administra­tion’s tax reform proposal
US National Economic Director Gary Cohn (left) and Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin while unveiling the Trump administra­tion’s tax reform proposal

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