Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

» Trump tax claim:

- TOM KERTSCHER In 1986, President Ronald Reagan led the effort to make America the most competitiv­e nation in the world by cutting our business tax rate to 34%, well below the average rate of other developed nations at the time. It worked. Our economy boo

President Donald Trump pushes his own tax cuts in a Journal Sentinel op-ed and states the impact of a single Ronald Reagan tax cut.

To reach what a White House spokesman called “the heartland of America,” President Donald Trump wrote an opinion article for the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel that called on Congress to pass his tax reform bill.

In Sunday’s op-ed, Trump invoked a Republican famous for tax cutting to argue that his own proposed cuts would spur economic growth.

Trump wrote:

As we’ll see, some economists say Reagan’s reduction in the corporate tax rate helped boost the economy.

But seven experts we spoke to were unanimous in saying that a single tax cut can’t be credited for making dramatic gains in an economy that is affected by a whole host of taxes, as well as many factors not related to taxes, such as demographi­cs and trade policies.

“Mathematic­ally, he’s on firm ground” in terms of economic growth and increases in median income in the years after the corporate rate cut, Manhattan Institute senior fellow Brian Riedl said of Trump’s claim.

But attributin­g those gains to one cut is something else.

“It’s always very hard to specify which policies led the economy to perform the way it did,” Riedl said.

Said University of WisconsinM­adison professor emeritus of applied economics Andrew Reschovsky, who worked in the Office of Tax Analysis at the U.S. Treasury: “The problem is, economies are complex things. It is really impossible to attribute any

change” in the economy to a single tax cut.

Trump’s evidence

To back Trump’s claim about the effects of the 1986 corporate tax rate cut, the White House cited several statistics indicating the economy improved during the next several years.

Among them: A 4.2% increase in gross domestic product in 1988, according to the World Bank; and an increase of nearly $2,000 — from $51,388 to $53,367 — in the real median household income, from 1986 to 1989.

But there are two important points to consider here, the economists told us.

1. The corporate tax rate cut — from 46% to 34% — was only one of a host of cuts made in the Tax Reform Act of 1986.

As Americans for Tax Reform recalled in celebratin­g the Reagan bill, the legislatio­n also reduced the top marginal individual income tax rate from 50% to 28%and slashed the total number of income brackets from 14 to two, among many other tax changes. As the Washington Post reported, “tax shelters for the wealthy, which proliferat­ed before the bill became law, were struck a mortal blow,” the “onceall-powerful oil-and-gas lobby also had a few of its tax benefits clipped” and “millions of low-income Americans were taken off the income tax rolls entirely.”

A corporate rate tax cut can help grow the economy and raise wages, said American Enterprise Institute economics policy resident scholar Aparna Mathur, whose specialtie­s include tax policy and corporate taxation. But “it’s really hard to pin down” cause and effect, or to determine how much improvemen­t they yield, she said.

Bruce Bartlett, a domestic policy adviser in the Reagan White House, was more critical of Trump’s claim. “The economy did not boom. It grew at about the same rate as before the tax reform and by 1990 was tanking,” he told us.

University of California, Berkeley economist Alan Auerbach, the author of an American Economic Associatio­n journal article on the economic effects of the 1986 tax reform law, gave a more positive view.

“The economy did OK after 1986 until the 1990-91 recession, but there was no significan­t change in the economy’s overall trajectory immediatel­y after the 1986 act,” he said. “The economy did boom in the mid- to late-1990s, and the middle class did relatively well during that period, but it’s hard to attribute that to the 1986 act.”

And much more difficult to attribute, as Trump did, any economic gains to only the corporate tax rate cut among the broader package of 1986 tax reforms.

2. Many factors aside from taxes help determine the performanc­e of the economy.

Mathur said factors such as immigratio­n and trade also affect the economy.

While the economy improved after the various 1986 Reagan tax changes, “you had a lot of winds behind the sails,” said Tax Policy Center former co-director Eugene Steurle, who was deputy assistant

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secretary of the U.S. Department of the Treasury for Tax Analysis under Reagan.

He cited baby boomers reaching their peak earning years and more women entering the workforce.

Said Cato Institute senior fellow Daniel Mitchell, whose specialtie­s include fiscal policy and tax reform:

“One could certainly make an argument the (corporate tax rate cut) was good for growth, it was good for the middle class — but lots of other things are, too.”

To claim major economic gains were fueled only by the corporate cut, he said, “is puffery.”

Our rating

In a Journal Sentinel op-ed, Trump said: “In 1986, President Ronald Reagan” cut the business tax rate to 34% and “it worked — our economy boomed, the middle class thrived and median family income increased.”

Some economists say the corporate rate reduction, from 46%, did help lead to economic growth and higher income. But it wasn’t necessaril­y any more important than a cut — from 50% to 28% — in the top individual income tax rate that was part of the same 1986 package that included other tax changes, as well.

More importantl­y, many other factors beyond tax cuts — demographi­cs, immigratio­n, trade policy and more — bear on the economy.

Trump’s statement contains only an element of truth — our definition of Mostly False.

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