New York Post

A $leight of handout

- BRIAN RIEDL Brian Riedl is a senior fellow at the Manhattan Institute. Twitter: @Brian_Riedl

PRESIDENT Biden’s budget request is meant to drive headlines showcasing a claimed $3 trillion in deficit reduction over the next decade. In reality, his budget proposes the largest tax increase in modern history, plows much of the new savings into more new spending and leaves Social Security on its path to insolvency.

Start with taxes. Inflation-adjusted federal revenues have already soared to $1 trillion above pre-pandemic levels, to their second-highest share of the economy since World War II. Yet the president would raise taxes by an additional $5 trillion over the decade — the largest tax hike since the 1960s.

Total revenues would approach 20% of the economy, and income-tax revenues would average 10% of the economy over the decade. Both would represent the highest sustained tax burdens in American history.

America’s businesses would bear much of the tax burden. Total corporate taxes would jump by 56%, to their highest sustained share of the economy since the 1970s (and may exceed the 1970s levels when also accounting for small-business taxes). Much of these revenues would come from raising the corporate tax rate from 21% to 28%. When including state taxes, American corporatio­ns would face the second-highest tax burden among Organizati­on for Economic Co-operation and Developmen­t nations. In a world of global tax competitio­n, America would again hamstring its own competitiv­eness.

One could defend steep tax increases if accompanie­d by equal spending savings as part of a balanced plan to combat Washington’s trillion-dollar deficits. Instead, $2 trillion of these new taxes would go toward new spending initiative­s — on top of the $5 trillion in new spending Biden has already enacted. Inflation-adjusted spending, which was $5 trillion before the pandemic, would nearly reach $7 trillion next year — or $51,000 per US household. Total federal spending would reach 25% of the economy within a decade, a level unseen outside World War II and the recent pandemic.

So the president’s record tax increases cannot keep up with runaway spending. Even with $5 trillion in tax hikes bringing the highest sustained tax burden America has ever seen, the publicheld national debt would still jump from $25 trillion to $44 trillion according to the president’s own figures. Annual budget deficits would grow past $2 trillion even with peace and prosperity. Simply paying the interest on the national debt would cost taxpayers $10 trillion over the decade — more than any program besides Social Security and Medicare.

Speaking of Social Security and Medicare, Biden has portrayed himself as the defender of these programs even as their costs soar unsustaina­bly. Yet not one penny of the president’s $5 trillion tax increase would go toward averting Social Security’s scheduled insolvency in a little more than a decade. By refusing to offer any Social Security reforms, Biden is essentiall­y endorsing the automatic 20% benefit cut scheduled in just over a decade.

Bogus claims

Biden also claims his budget shores up Medicare funding for two decades. He proposes significan­t tax increases on upperincom­e families, investors and small businesses to prop up Medicare Part A (hospital insurance). But much of the claimed Medicare trust-fund improvemen­t comes from simply transferri­ng in existing general funds — a shift between government accounts that saves no money. The budget also does little to rein in the unsustaina­ble costs of Medicare Parts B and D (the physician and prescripti­on-drug benefits) that push Medicare’s 30-year shortfall to $80 trillion.

Biden has proposed a political document meant to generate sympatheti­c headlines, rather than begin any serious negotiatio­ns with Republican­s. More taxes, more spending, $17 trillion in red ink and Social Security insolvency do not represent a serious or responsibl­e proposal.

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