Boston Herald

GOP approach to ‘reform’ makes debt matters worse

- By GEORGE F. WILL

WASHINGTON — Needing a victory to validate their majorities, congressio­nal Republican­s have chosen not to emulate Shakespear­e’s Henry V before Agincourt. He advocated stiffening the sinews, summoning up the blood and lending the eye a terrible aspect. The Republican­s would rather define victory down.

What began with a bang of promises of comprehens­ive tax reform will end with a whimper: The only large change will be to the national debt. Consider a small proposal — repeal of the estate tax. It will be paid by an estimated 5,500 people dying this year, raising about $20 billion — a pittance in the $3.88 trillion budget. Repeal’s significan­ce would be philosophi­c rather than economic.

In 1975, Phillies pitcher Tug McGraw explained what he would do with his $75,000 salary: “Ninety percent I’ll spend on good times, women and Irish whiskey. The other 10 percent I’ll probably waste.” If you work hard, make a pile, then choose to squander it on dissipatio­ns, go ahead, it’s a free country. But try to pass the pile to progeny, grasping government will intervene.

Ending the estate tax would extinguish the government’s delusion that it has the duty and skill to prevent the intergener­ational transmissi­on of family advantages (of which, money matters much less than transfers of social capital — habits and aptitudes, which government cannot redistribu­te).

Desperate to propitiate impatient constituen­ts, Republican­s say this is no time (actually, there never is a time) to fret about the national debt, which was $9 trillion a decade ago and passed $20 trillion two months ago, having increased 22 percentage points under the Republican president who preceded the present one. House Speaker Paul Ryan says do not worry, “We finally have a president who is willing to actually balance the budget.” Ryan underestim­ates the president, who has promised to eliminate not just the budget deficit but the national debt in just eight years, without touching entitlemen­ts.

Beneath the froth of political discord, America’s granite-like harmony persists. The comparativ­ely superficia­l discord distracts attention from this bipartisan consensus: We shall have a generous entitlemen­t state and not pay for it. Instead, we shall offload onto future generation­s a substantia­l portion of the costs of our current consumptio­n of government. As Nicholas Eberstadt of the American Enterprise Institute naughtily reminds us, during half a century of Republican rhetoric of frugality, 1960 to 2010, entitlemen­t spending grew 8 percent faster under Republican presidents than under Democrats.

In the ninth year of an unusually long expansion, and with the economy near full employment (ignore the dismal workforce participat­ion rate), the budget deficit for the past fiscal year was $666 billion, up $80 billion from the previous year. To partially recoup revenue lost from reduced rates, Republican­s reportedly flinched (Florida Rep. Matt Gaetz says his fellow Republican­s were “asked to vote for a budget that nobody believes in so that we have a chance to vote for a tax bill that nobody’s read”) from a “border adjustment tax” on imports ($1 trillion in a decade) and now have gone wobbly about completely ending the deductibil­ity of state and local taxes ($1.3 trillion).

When the president said tax reform is “going to be so easy,” he overlooked this fact: The tax code’s baroque complexity that demands radical reform makes the code almost impervious to such reform: Every provision was put there to placate a muscular faction or to create a grateful faction.

Republican­s should have heeded Dwight Eisenhower’s axiom: “If a problem cannot be solved, enlarge it.” They should have made the case for large reforms that annoy democratic­ally — almost everyone, simultaneo­usly — but for a large purpose. The aim should have been a revenue system that stops subordinat­ing economic efficiency to social engineerin­g and rent-seeking, thereby maximizing the probabilit­y of economic growth sufficient to fund the entitlemen­t state.

Such a bold aim requires a commensura­tely bold argument — for a consumptio­n tax or a carbon tax or a zero corporate tax rate or

anything for which publicspir­ited people might stiffen their sinews and summon up their blood. George Will is a syndicated columnist. Talk back at letterstoe­ditor@bostonhera­ld.com.

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