Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Can US states right Trump’s wrongs?

- By Barry Eichengree­n

Most recently, his misguided decision to withdraw from the Paris climate agreement jeopardise­s America’s global standing. Worse, it puts the health and welfare of the planet at risk. If you live in a state that wants to mandate maternity coverage for everybody, including 60-year-old women, that’s fine,” And if you don’t, “then you can figure out a way to change the state that you live in”

VENICE – US President Donald Trump, with the help of a Re publ i c a n - c o n t r o l l e d Congress, is underminin­g many of the fundamenta­l values that Americans hold dear. He is jeopardisi­ng their access to health care by seeking to repeal the 2010 Affordable Care Act (“Obamacare”). His budget prop o s e s m a s s ive cuts in everything from early childhood education to food stamps and medical research. His tax reform plan, and especially its much lower top rate for “passthroug­h” business income, implies significan­t further redistribu­tion of income to the wealthy.

Most recently, his misguided decision to withdraw from the Paris climate agreement jeopardise­s America’s global standing. Worse, it puts the health and welfare of the planet at risk.

This is a good time to remember that the United States is a federal system, not a unitary State with an all- powerful central government (think France). Its system is enshrined in the Tenth Amendment of the US Constituti­on, which stipulates that all powers not expressly assigned to the federal government are “reserved to the states.”

Traditiona­lly, states’ rights were invoked by southern states to defend slavery, and then nearly a century of Jim Crow (the legal framework for racial segregatio­n), from federal interferen­ce, thereby preserving southern business owners’ and farmers’ control of their black labour force. More recently, socially conservati­ve states have appealed to the Tenth Amendment to oppose progressiv­e legislatio­n and the expansion of federal powers more generally.

Now the tables have turned. Can Americans who oppose the contractio­n of social programs and revocation of progressiv­e federal legislatio­n use states’ rights to counter these trends?

Consider environmen­tal poli- cy. California already has its own relatively stringent standards for vehicle emissions. Fourteen other states have adopted those standards, which therefore cover 40% of the US population. Auto companies can’t afford to produce two different sets of cars for states with strict and lenient emission rules. So California could well dictate emissions standards for the country.

Moreover, one can imagine California signing voluntary climate deals with China and other countries in an effort to restore the culture of oversight and accountabi­lity of the Paris accord. Indeed, the state’s capand-trade carbon program is the model for the carbon- trading scheme that Chinese officials are currently considerin­g. It is worth recalling that California is the world’s sixth largest econ- omy, a fact that makes it a plausible interlocut­or for environmen­tally conscious countries.

After that, however, it gets harder. The California State Senate just passed a bill to create a single-payer health plan without specifying how to pay for it. One possibilit­y is a 15% payroll tax. Another is to plough Medicare dollars provided by the federal government into the plan. But it is unclear whether either approach is politicall­y viable.

Like the residents of other “blue” ( Democratic) states, California­ns clearly prefer more spending on education and social services. The problem is that they are already subject to some of the highest personal income and business taxes in the country. Groups like the Howard Jarvis Taxpayers Associatio­n warn that further increases could lead to a massive exodus of businesses and jobs.

Two of my Berkeley colleagues, Emmanuel Saez and Gabriel Zucman, have come up with a two-part solution to this problem. First, they would tax the global profits of companies on the basis of the share of their sales occurring in California. Second, they would levy a modest 1% wealth tax on residents with assets of more than $ 20 million. Critics will warn of a brain drain, but do we really think that a 1% tax would convince, say, the venture capitalist Peter Thiel to pack up and move to New Zealand?

There are two scenarios – one benign, the other vindictive – for what another of my Berkeley colleagues, Laura Tyson, has called “progressiv­e federalism.”

In the benign scenario, people will club together in different states on the basis of their preference­s for big or small government, public or private provision of services, and internatio­nal cooperatio­n or isolationi­sm. Mick Mulvaney, Trump’s budget director, has himself made the case. “If you live in a state that wants to mandate maternity coverage for everybody, including 60- year- old women, that’s fine,” And if you don’t, “then you can figure out a way to change the state that you live in” or alter “state legislatur­es and state laws,” in Mulvaney’s words. “Why do we look to the federal Government to try and fix our local problems?”

In the vindictive scenario, by contrast, Trump and the Congress could seek to limit progressiv­e states’ rights. They could prohibit use of Medicare funds for single- payer health plans. They could refuse to renew the waiver of Environmen­tal Protection Agency regulation­s that allows California to impose its more stringent emissions standards.

They could invoke the Commerce Clause of the Constituti­on as part of an effort to prevent states from signing climate accords with foreign countries. They could eliminate the federal deductibil­ity of state taxes to increase the cost of funding state programs. They could curtail federal support for public services in sanctuary cities and states with immigrant-friendly policies.

We Americans are about to find out in which US, benign or

vindictive, we now live. (The writer is a professor at the University of California, Berkeley, and the University of Cambridge. His latest book is Hall of Mirrors: The Great Depression, the Great Recession, and the Uses – and

Misuses – of History.) Courtesy: Project Syndicate, 2017. Exclusive to the Sunday Times.www.project-syndicate.org

 ??  ?? Protests against attempts to repeal “Obamacare”. Pic courtesy CNN
Protests against attempts to repeal “Obamacare”. Pic courtesy CNN

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