Las Vegas Review-Journal

Problem isn’t raising taxes, it’s spending, spending

One way to keep politician­s on a short leash and help return to reality

- JONAH GOLDBERG Jonah Goldberg is editorin-chief of The Dispatch and the host of The Remnant podcast. His Twitter handle is @Jonahdispa­tch.

CONFESSION time: I’m open to raising taxes. As a lifelong conservati­ve, making this case comes as easily as arguing for a weak national defense, or more U.N. funding.

So please bear with me as I walk through why I’m open to the idea.

One of the most important lessons of the past two decades is that black swan events — game-changing surprises — aren’t nearly so rare as we’d like.

In 2001, a terrorist attack resulted in two decades of military conflict. Adding up defense, health care for vets and other costs, the price tag amounts to an estimated $5.8 trillion to $8 trillion.

In 2007-08, a financial crisis almost wrecked the economy. The combined loss of tax revenue and increased expenditur­es put the cost around $2 trillion. A 2018 Federal Reserve Board study estimated the cost to each American at $70,000. The social and political costs are still unfolding. Historical­ly, financial crises spark intense and long-lasting populist revolts. Normal recessions do not have the same effect. (This is something to keep in mind as a debt crisis becomes more likely.)

Then there’s the pandemic. In November, economists David Cutler and Lawrence Summers estimated the costs in lost growth, income, life expectancy, etc. to be more than $16 trillion, roughly 90 percent of U.S. annual gross domestic product. The federal government has spent nearly $6 trillion combating the pandemic.

Much of that spending was necessary or defensible. Government is supposed to respond to extraordin­ary circumstan­ces with extraordin­ary measures.

Which brings me to the case for raising taxes.

What happens when the next black swan touches down? Do we have the financial bandwidth to handle a new pandemic or financial crisis? How about a Chinese invasion of Taiwan? A nuclear terror attack? And, remember, the current pandemic isn’t over yet.

World War II was a noble and necessary expenditur­e of national resources. But it was expensive, driving national debt to 110 percent of GDP. Afterward, there was a broad consensus that we had to pay it down.

Today, our debt level is even worse, but to say there is no similar consensus is an understate­ment on par with saying “America isn’t in a bipartisan mood.” Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-VT., insists that progressiv­es have already compromise­d by coming down from a desired $6 trillion in additional spending on a raft of new entitlemen­ts and social welfare programs. Sen. Joe Manchin III (D-W. Va.) is universall­y hailed

— or demonized — as a “moderate” because he will agree to a reconcilia­tion package of “only” $1.5 trillion to $2 trillion on top of $1 trillion in traditiona­l infrastruc­ture spending. Even 10 years ago, favoring that much spending would have marked Manchin as a Bernie Sanders liberal.

Some of this spending may be for desirable or worthy things. But none of it makes sense given the fact we’re broke, never mind facing the possible return of inflation. And the White House’s risible claims that it won’t cost anything makes sense only if you think raising taxes to pay for new entitlemen­ts is costless.

Yes, Keynesians favor increased spending and lower taxes to get out of a recession by stimulatin­g consumer demand (and yes, we are all Keynesians now). The thing is, we’re not in a recession and demand is not our problem.

So, in theory, raising (some) taxes in order to pay for previous spending on previous black swans and thus prepare for the next one makes sense.

The problem is we live in nonsensica­l times. There is zero appetite in Washington to deal with the debt. That’s in part because voters don’t care about it either — and that’s because they’ve figured out the politician­s never really cared to begin with. Republican­s squandered their remaining credibilit­y on the issue under President Donald Trump, and Democrats have simply rejected the premise that debt matters at all. Democrats want what they imagine to be a European-style welfare state but blanch at taxing the middle class at European levels to pay for it — which you’d have to do.

One benefit of caring about debt is that it constrains the ambitions of politician­s. This is how it works in our own lives.

Even for those of us who don’t want to live in a European welfare state, raising taxes to pay for the government Americans may want has an upside: It should teach us to keep politician­s on a short leash. If Americans thought they would pay for the $6 trillion they’ve borrowed and spent on the pandemic, they’d be less likely to support spending trillions more. They might say, “Let’s save that for a rainy day — or a black swan.”

I’m willing to talk about limited tax hikes, but not while people are talking about unlimited spending.

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