Saturday, October 11, 2008

Money & Business

Capital Commerce

McCain Campaign: We're All Supply-Siders Now

July 07, 2008 12:35 PM ET | James Pethokoukis | Permanent Link | Print

I just got off a McCain campaign conference call with Douglas Holtz-Eakin and Steve Forbes. I was most interested in hearing what those guys would say about McCain's latest promise to eliminate the budget deficit by the end of his first term. The best I can tell, he plans on doing it through a combo of stronger economic growth, eliminating some unnamed programs, and cutting the growth of discretionary spending. I remain skeptical given the paucity of detail. But here is what I wrote a few months back:

The fiscal knot that a President McCain would have to untie to meet his promise to extend the Bush tax cuts, cut corporate taxes, eliminate the alternative minimum tax, and create an optional two-rate income tax system—while also getting America's fiscal house in order—may seem like one of Gordian difficulty.

1) The Congressional Budget Office will treat all McCain's tax cuts as pure revenue losers—an argument the media will completely buy into. And even the McCain campaign isn't making the argument that his tax cuts would come close to fully paying for themselves through the increased revenue that comes from higher economic growth. (A good thing, since Team McCain doesn't believe much in supply-side effects.) With the corporate tax rate cut, for instance, the campaign thinks it can recoup $30 billion of the $100 billion in lost revenue. So in isolation, McCain's tax-cut proposals would increase the budget deficit, which may be half a trillion bucks or more in 2009.

2) Assuming he isn't going to slash the Pentagon's budget, McCain realistically can't cut nondefense discretionary spending enough to pay for his tax cuts. In 2007, nondefense discretionary spending was $458 billion, or 3.3 percent of gross domestic product. If McCain was able to cut the $160 billion or so in excess spending he says he could find in the budget—whether through eliminating earmarks or other reductions—that would cut spending on education, border security, technology investment, and other discretionary items to around $300 billion, or 2.1 percent of GDP. Now the low point for the past four decades was 3 percent GDP in 1999.

Yet even that skimpy amount of spending would still leave a huge budget gap. Just extending the Bush tax cuts, for instance, would add an average of $280 billion a year to the budget deficit from 2011 to 2018, according to the old-fashioned, static analysis of the CBO. So using the campaign's own economic logic, McCain would pretty much have to eliminate all nondefense discretionary spending to pay for his tax cuts.

Bottom line: The only way this all makes sense is if McCain believes his tax cuts will supercharge the economy in true supply-side fashion, that growth from the tax cuts will more than make up for the loss in revenue from lower rates. If so, this represents a change in philosophy. In the past, Team McCain has not claimed such powerful economic effects from his tax cuts.

Tags: economy | John McCain

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Reader Comments

"So using the campaign's own economic logic, McCain would pretty much have to eliminate all nondefense discretionary spending to pay for his tax cuts."

I'm game, but we all know that some politician or crybaby would come out of the woodwork, decrying how we are taking from "insert favored group here."

"Emergency" spending bills

What good is a balanced budget if Congress keeps using "emergency" supplemental spending bills to hide the costs of the war in Iraq?

The budget might look balanced, but in reality we'll still be spiraling into debt.

David Stockman, Ronald Reagan's budget director, admitted that the 1981 tax cut was a Trojan horse:

“ The hard part of the supply-side tax cut is dropping the top rate from 70 to 50 percent—the rest of it is a secondary matter. The original argument was that the top bracket was too high, and that's having the most devastating effect on the economy. Then, the general argument was that, in order to make this palatable as a political matter, you had to bring down all the brackets. But, I mean, Kemp-Roth was always a Trojan horse to bring down the top rate."

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About the Capital Commerce Blog

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James Pethokoukis is the money and politics blogger for U.S. News & World Report , where he writes the monthly Capital Commerce magazine column. Pethokoukis is also the assistant managing editor of the magazine's Money & Business section. He has written for many publications including the New York Times, the American, USA Today, Investor's Business Daily, and TCS Daily. Pethokoukis is also an official CNBC contributor and appears frequently on that network's Kudlow & Company, Power Lunch, and The Call shows. In addition, he has appeared numerous times on MSNBC, Fox News Channel, Fox Business Network, CNN, and Nightly Business Report on PBS. A 1989 graduate of Northwestern University where he double majored in Soviet politics and American history and a 1991 graduate of the Medill School of Journalism, Pethokoukis is a 2002 Jeopardy! champion.

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