The Signal

Tax plan packs punch but could bruise the economy

Long-term effects would strain U.S., experts say

- Paul Davidson

“It juices growth in 2018, but it likely reduces growth in the early part of the next decade.” Mark Zandi chief economist, Moody’s Analytics

The Republican tax-cut package unveiled Thursday would give the U.S. economy a big sugar-high next year. But the inevitable comedown is likely to follow, economists say.

By reducing taxes for households and businesses, the reform would boost consumer spending and business investment in the short term, lifting economic growth. But with the economy at full employment, it also would strain its capacity to respond to the surge in activity, stoking faster wage growth and inflation. That will lead the Federal Reserve to raise interest rates more rapidly, discouragi­ng home purchases and consumer and business borrowing, says Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody’s Analytics.

Interest rates also would rise because the plan would reduce federal tax revenue by $1.5 trillion, swelling the deficit and forcing the government to borrow more to finance spending.

“It juices growth in 2018, but it likely reduces growth in the early part of the next decade.” Zandi says. “My sense is that 10 years from now, the economy will be no bigger than it would have been.”

Under the plan, the economy would grow about 3% next year, up from 2.2% under the status quo, Zandi says. He says the economy would add an additional 800,000 or so jobs in 2018; Greg Daco, chief economist at Oxford Economics estimates a more modest gain of 600,000.

But while higher interest rates would slightly dampen activity next year, they would have a bigger impact in 2019, leaving a net boost to growth of just three-tenths of a percentage point, Daco says. By 2020, the higher rates would overwhelm any remaining stimulus from the tax reform, resulting in a net drag on economic growth of about a half a percentage point, Daco says. And Zandi says the economy would lose jobs that year

Gary Hufbauer, an economist and senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for Internatio­nal Economics, doesn’t believe the increased economic activity will stir inflation and require faster rate hikes that offset the gains.

“I don’t buy that,” he says. For example, he says, a legacy of the recession of 2007-09 is that many Americans are working part time even though they prefer full-time jobs, while many discourage­d workers remain on the sidelines. That’s a surplus labor supply that can contain wages and inflation, he says.

White House officials, meanwhile, have said the plan won’t balloon the deficit because the stronger economic growth will bring in more tax revenue, allowing the blueprint to pay for itself. Zandi and Daco, like many other economists, are skeptical.

 ?? JIM LO SCALZO/EPA-EFE ?? Republican Speaker of the House Paul Ryan, along with other House Republican­s, talks about the tax overhaul Thursday in Washington, D.C.
JIM LO SCALZO/EPA-EFE Republican Speaker of the House Paul Ryan, along with other House Republican­s, talks about the tax overhaul Thursday in Washington, D.C.

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