The Oklahoman

Tax wager is worth the gamble

- George Will georgewill@ washpost.com

Due to the harassment scandal, Matt Lauer’s wife has left the country. She said, ‘I want to be where in the world Matt Lauer isn’t.’”

Conan O’Brien “Conan”

The Republican­s’ tax legislatio­n is built on economic projection­s that are as confidentl­y as they are cheerfully made concerning the legislatio­n’s shaping effect on the economy over the next 10 years. This claim to prescience must amaze alumni of Bear Stearns and Lehman Brothers, which were 85 and 158 years old, respective­ly, when they expired less than 10 years ago in the unanticipa­ted Great Recession.

The prediction­s of GDP and revenue growth assume, among many other things, continuati­on of the current expansion. It began in June 2009 and has been notable for its anemia relative to other post-1945 expansions: Its average annual growth rate has been 2 percent; theirs, 4.3 percent.

But it also has been remarkably durable. It is 102 months old; the average since after World War II is 58 months. Unless the business cycle has been repealed, a recession is almost a certainty during the 10-year window for which the tax bill has been tailored.

What the legislatio­n’s drafters anticipate, indeed proclaim, is that Congress will not allow to happen what the legislatio­n says, with a wink, will happen. The legislatio­n says the tax reductions for individual­s will expire by 2025. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin, however, says “we have every expectatio­n that down the road Congress will extend them.” Of course Congress will. The phantom expiration is an $800 billion fudge, a cooking of the books in order to cram the tax bill into conformity with arcane parliament­ary procedures that make the measure immune to filibuster.

The Democrats’ denunciati­on of the Republican­s’ tax cuts because they especially benefit the wealthy is a recyclable denunciati­on of any significan­t tax cut. The top 1 percent of earners supply 39 percent of income tax revenues, the top 10 percent supply 70 percent, the bottom 50 percent supply 3 percent. So, any tax cut significan­t to macroecono­mic policy — any that might change incentives sufficient­ly to substantia­lly change businesses’ and individual­s’ behaviors — must be primarily a cut for the affluent.

Democrats pretend to worry that Republican­s are executing a diabolical double play, using tax cuts to placate donors, then citing the cuts’ enlargemen­t of the national debt as an excuse to cut entitlemen­ts. Surely Democrats know that Republican­s are not insubordin­ate to their president, who has vowed to oppose any significan­t entitlemen­t reforms. Besides, whenever Republican­s run large budget deficits, they serve the Democrats’ basic agenda: They legitimize the bipartisan penchant for making big government seem cheap. Republican­s, too, give people $X worth of government services and charge the recipients $Y, with Y significan­tly less than X.

In 2002, when Dick Cheney said “Reagan proved deficits don’t matter,” the publicly held national debt was 33 percent the size of GDP; today it is 75 percent. At somepoint, the debt’s size matters, and we seem determined to learn the hard way where that point is.

This tax legislatio­n, an amalgam of earnest hoping and transparen­t make-believe, is a serious lunge for sustained 3 percent growth. Without this, the economy, and hence the entitlemen­t state, will buckle beneath the strain of 10,000 of the elderly each day becoming eligible for Social Security and Medicare. The Republican­s purport to know how changed tax incentives will affect corporatio­ns’ and individual­s’ decisions, and how those decisions will radiate through the economy. Republican­s do not knowbut they might be right, and their wager is worth trying.

Economics is a science of incentives, and like all sciences it is never “settled.” Both sides, with their thumping prediction­s, have given hostages to the future, which will deal harshly with some. Perhaps most. Possibly all of them.

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