Chicago Sun-Times

GOP tax plan more trickle- down voodoo

- BY ROBERT B. REICH Robert B. Reich was Secretary of Labor under President Bill Clinton.

President Donald Trump and conservati­ves in Congress are planning a big tax cut for millionair­es and billionair­es. To justify it, they’re using the oldest song in their playbook, claiming tax cuts on the rich will trickle down to working families in the form of stronger economic growth.

Baloney. Trickle- down economics is a cruel joke. Just look at the evidence:

1. Clinton’s tax increase on the rich hardly stalled the economy. In 1993, Bill Clinton raised taxes on top earners from 31 percent to 39.6 percent. Conservati­ves predicted economic disaster. Instead, the economy created 23 million jobs and the economy grew for 8 straight years in what was then the longest expansion in history. The federal budget went into surplus.

2. George W. Bush’s big tax cuts for the rich didn’t grow the economy. In 2001 and 2003, Bush lowered the top tax rate to 35 percent while also cutting top rates on capital gains and dividends. Conservati­ve advocates of supply- side economics predicted an economic boom. Instead, the economy barely grew at all, and then in 2008, it collapsed. Meanwhile, the federal deficit ballooned.

3. Obama’s tax hike on the rich didn’t slow the economy. At the end of 2012, President Barack Obama struck a deal to restore the 39.6 percent top tax rate and raise tax rates on capital gains and dividends. Once again, supply- side conservati­ves predicted doom. Instead, the economy grew steadily, and the expansion is still continuing.

4. The Reagan recovery of the early 1980s wasn’t driven by Reagan’s tax cut. Conservati­ve supply- siders point to Ronald Reagan’s 1981 tax cuts. But the socalled Reagan recovery of the early 1980s was driven by low interest rates and a big increase in government spending.

5. Kansas cut taxes on the rich and is a basket case. California raised them and is thriving. In 2012, Kansas slashed taxes on top earners and business owners, while California raised taxes on top earners to the highest state rate in the nation. Since then, California has had among the strongest economic growth of any state, while Kansas has fallen behind most other states.

So don’t fall for supplyside, trickle- down nonsense. Lower taxes on the rich don’t generate growth and jobs. They only make the rich even richer, at a time of raging inequality, and they cause bigger budget deficits.

 ??  ?? President Donald Trump pauses while speaking about tax reform at the Indiana State Fairground­s on Sept. 27 in Indianapol­is. | ALEX BRANDON/ AP
President Donald Trump pauses while speaking about tax reform at the Indiana State Fairground­s on Sept. 27 in Indianapol­is. | ALEX BRANDON/ AP

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