The Palm Beach Post

A tax cut hardworkin­g Americans can well afford

- Peter Morici He is an economist and business professor at the University of Maryland.

Republican congressio­nal leaders appear likely to pass tax changes and cuts that the country needs and can afford — but whose benefits Democrats can hardly bear to face.

Democrats believe boosting welfare — free health care, subsidized housing and food stamps for able-bodied adults who refuse to work — is the road to growth. Republican­s believe giving money back to folks who earned it is the better path.

The Obama recovery gave us 2.1 percent growth. If a reconciled bill from the House and Senate is signed into law, we will see if President Ronald Reagan’s magic still works — he got better than 4 percent growth from tax cuts and deregulati­on.

The Republican plan eliminates a lot of exemptions and deductions, and applies the savings plus another $1.4 trillion over 10 years to lower rates. The benefits are broadly spread — contrary to the invectives from Democratic leaders Charles Schumer and Nancy Pelosi, the plan will cut the federal bite for more than 90 percent of taxpayers in 2019.

Americans have a proud tradition dating back to Thomas Jefferson: put more money in their pockets and they spend it.

That means a nice boost for restaurant­s, auto dealers and perhaps in applicatio­ns at my university or at least on what’s really important — sales of football and basketball tickets and fan parapherna­lia at the college bookstore.

Any way you slice it, that’s just like President Barack Obama handing out more food stamps, but this time the money goes to hardworkin­g families instead of indolent computer game aficionado­s.

Slashing the corporate tax rate from 35 percent to 20 percent, along with some other changes in levies on foreign income, would put U.S. businesses on a more level playing field with competitor­s in Europe and Asia.

The staff of the Joint Committee on Taxation estimates that a one-time boost to the level of consumer spending and the dynamic growth effects of an improved investment environmen­t should increase gross domestic product by 0.8 percent and generate about $400 billion in net new revenue; hence, over 10 years, the Republican tax plan would increase the deficit by about $1 trillion.

That’s something the country can’t afford — or can it?

In economists’ parlance, the JCT appears to be using very conservati­ve multiplier­s to estimate the impact — especially considerin­g that European government­s have been cutting corporate rates in recent years. Using more moderate estimates, I come up with additional growth of 1.9 percent and $670 billion in new revenue.

Apart from quibbling about those figures, something more profound is happening and has gone largely unnoticed during the tax-cut theatrics: A new optimism has taken hold, much as it did when Reagan was elected.

For three quarters running, the economy has been banging along at 3 percent growth — despite record damage from Western wildfires and hurricanes in Florida and Texas. Even without a tax cut, but factoring in a customaril­y slow winter quarter, it seems that annual economic growth has shifted up to 2.5 percent, and that should produce an additional $800 billion to $1 trillion in tax revenue over the next decade.

In 2020, the Democratic presidenti­al nominee will have a tough time running against a Trump economy that put more money in Americans’ pockets and with a federal deficit in much better shape.

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