Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

‘Trickle-down’ tax cuts are of no value to overall economy, study finds

- By Christophe­r Ingraham

President Donald Trump sold his 2017 tax cuts as “rocket fuel” for the economy, arguing that freeing up money for the wealthy would allow them to hire more workers, pay better wages and invest more. The tax savings, in other words, would trickle down from the rich to everyone else.

But, just as many economists predicted, slashing individual, corporate and estate tax rates was mostly a windfall for big corporatio­ns and wealthy Americans. The Tax Cuts and Jobs Act didn’t pay for itself, failed to stimulate long-term growth and didn’t lead to sustained business investment­s.

According to one of the most comprehens­ive studies to date on tax cuts for the rich, this should come as no surprise. David Hope and Julian Limberg of the London

School of Economics examined five decades of tax cuts in 18 wealthy nations and found they consistent­ly benefited the wealthy but had no meaningful effect on either unemployme­nt or economic growth.

The researcher­s started by constructi­ng a composite measure of “tax cuts on the rich” encompassi­ng a variety of taxes, including the top tax rate on personal income, the estate tax and the tax on capital gains. Because these taxes are levied predominan­tly on the wealthiest members of society, the wealthy stand to gain the most when they’re cut.

While previous studies on the effects of taxing the rich have tended to focus on just one type of tax, “our measure combines all of these important taxes on the rich into one indicator,” Mr. Hope and Mr. Limberg wrote in an email. “This provides a more complete picture of taxes on the rich, but it also allows for comparison­s across countries and over

time.”

Using this measure, they set out to identify “major” tax cuts on the rich in 18 wealthy nations from 1965 to 2015. In the United States, that included

the Reagan tax cuts of 1981 and 1986, which dramatical­ly reduced the top income tax rate from 70% down to 28% after fully taking effect.

They then traced what happened to those nations’ economies in the five years after the cuts were implemente­d. They focused particular­ly on income inequality, economic growth as measured by gross domestic product, and the unemployme­nt rate. They aggregated those trends across countries to capture the broadest possible picture of the tax cuts’ effects.

First, the tax cuts succeeded at putting more money in the pockets of the rich: the share of national income flowing to the top 1% increased by about 0.8 percentage points (for comparison, in the U.S. the bottom 10% of earners capture only 1.8% of the country’s income).

But they had no effect on either economic growth or employment; although those quantities fluctuated slightly following the major tax cuts studied, the effect was

statistica­lly indistingu­ishable from zero. The “rocket fuel” so often promised by supporters of these tax cuts? It fizzles out time and time again.

“In the last decade, especially with the pioneering work of Thomas Piketty and his co- authors, there has been a growing consensus that tax cuts for the rich lead to higher income inequality,” Mr. Hope and Mr. Limberg wrote via email. Mr. Piketty, a French economist, wrote “Capital in the Twenty-First Century,” an influentia­l book on the growth of inequality in rich nations.

Given the evidence, why are such targeted tax cuts perenniall­y popular among policymake­rs, especially Republican­s? The authors point to one major reason: the power of wealthy individual­s and corporatio­ns to set policy agendas through lobbying and campaign contributi­ons.

“There is a large political science literature on the power of rich voters and organised business interests to shape public policies in their favour,” the authors write.

Mr. Hope and Mr. Limberg say their findings offer one clear pathway for policymake­rs looking to dig their way out of the financial hole created by the coronaviru­s crisis: Make the rich pay for it.

Though the pandemic cost tens of millions of Americans their jobs and sent the U. S. economy into a tailspin, many at the top of the income distributi­on have seen their wealth skyrocket. The nation’s 651 billionair­es saw their net worth spike by more than $1 trillion during the first nine months of the pandemic according to Americans for Tax Fairness, a progressiv­e group advocating for higher taxes on the wealthy.

“We would argue that government­s should not be unduly concerned that taxing the rich will harm their economies when deciding how to pay for the costs of COVID-19,” they wrote via email.

 ?? Jabin Botsford/Washington Post ?? President Trump holds a news conference after signing the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act into law on Dec, 22, 2017.
Jabin Botsford/Washington Post President Trump holds a news conference after signing the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act into law on Dec, 22, 2017.

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