Capital Commerce

5 Ways the Next President Can Fix the Economy

By James Pethokoukis

Posted: May 19, 2008

"How the Next President Should Fix the Economy" is the current cover story at Time magazine. I think I can briefly sum up the 3,000-word story, written by Justin Fox, thusly: This election is a biggie for the economy. Insecure Americans want higher taxes and more regulation. Government should spend more on infrastructure to combat income inequality. Get rid of the Bush tax cuts even if it weakens the economy. Raise energy taxes. Increase regulation on Wall Street. Nationalize healthcare, pretty much.

This article may well be prophetic. But it is supposed to be prescriptive. How does any of that stuff make the economy more productive and competitive? About the only idea presented in the whole story that might have a positive growth impact is getting rid of the mortgage interest deduction. Now here are five ideas that both liberals and conservatives might agree on that also could actually improve economic growth by embracing the American model of capitalism that's working wonders the world over:

1) Eliminate corporate income taxes, especially if you are also going to hit companies with all these energy taxes.

2) Get companies out of the business of providing healthcare benefits.

3) Index Social Security benefits to inflation, and extend the retirement age, allowing a big cut in payroll taxes for the middle class.

4) Create government-funded "innovation prizes" for key technology challenges.

5) Give universities incentives to create more science geeks, and offer grad students free-floating fellowships to choose whatever field they see as the best market match for their skills.

I think it is also worth noting what Diana Farrell of the McKinsey Global Institute told me is the best way to make America more productive and competitive. The real key, as Farrell puts it, is "creating maximum competitive intensity" to force companies to constantly innovate—whether through new technology or business models or management processes—to keep ahead of rivals. And when competitors respond, those innovations get spread.

"Europe is innovative, but that innovation doesn't get diffused throughout various sectors," she says. For instance, hypermarkets like Wal-Mart have long been frowned upon in France and restricted via zoning requirements. Likewise, free trade—or as Farrell puts it, "exposure to global best practices"—is critical to fostering innovation of all sorts. Globalization forces U.S. companies to innovate or die—and in the process raises our standard of living. Something to think about before we start undoing a quarter century of deregulation and tossing up new barriers to trade.

This country is in deep debt

I think the economy is all about maximizing people's happiness. What I think we should do is raise the minimum wage, but support more industry to keep as much jobs in America, cut taxes but try diplomatic relations with everybody but North Korea so that we get more international trade and we can get our debt back. With this we increase our defense spending on SDI (i.e) but get out of both Iraq and Afghanistan, which will leave us with a terrorist problem but then we should renew the PATRIOT act. Increase the supply of our goods. And that would be my main components for the economy

Matt of MA @ Nov 06, 2009 17:45:39 PM

Danielle's thoughts.

My opinion for the first statement about eliminating corporate income taxes, especially if you are also going to hit companies with all the other energy taxes:

The issue of hitting the companies after the other taxes seems to be the taxation of shareholders who receive their dividends from a company out of profits which have already been taxed. What ever happened to the owner of the businesses only being taxed on the profits of the business? Now the business is taking hits from the profits as well as the distributions of the profits!

Also, I agree that by eliminating the corporate income tax can help our economy. We need to remember a good way to improve the economy should not be by adding new layers of the government, but by eliminating currently existing bad policies. We need to focus equally on efficiency and stimulus, so the government can set the state for a sustained and healthy recovery from this economy crisis.

Finally, the benefits for the economy will both affect the short-run and the long-run. I feel like it would benefit the most for the government budgets. In contrast, I feel like as a whole the outcome of eliminating the corporate income would not give much effect. For example, β€œIn 2012, the entire corporate income tax is expected to bring in only $339 billion. That is roughly 11” of the total revenues and barely half the projected deficit.”

Danielle Shamroe of GA @ Sep 29, 2009 22:16:02 PM

competition without regulation? games have referees and coaches

What is competition when we have big companies buying up small companies becoming bigger as a whole and running small companies out of business that will not sell or is not big enough to buy. is competition good when one company owns A town city state, or country?

small business's charge to much, Big business's charge what they can but low enough to put the little guy out of business. and in coming up with prices no body is considering the community they are doing business in just the bottom line which means sometimes making a show at caring for the community.

I like the idea of a small company because they can control and work better with there employees but have few other benefits.

I am afraid as our country gets bigger and our people stay out of the way of the government they are supposed to be a part of we will be more like slaves serving our government and pollution will get worse the dumps will fill up, there will be little wild life left........... I really do not want to think about where we are heading if the people do not take back the government.

It is the government that needs to be regulated by the people as well as business's

it's our country lets take care of it. you can go to most court houses to get the schedule of city counsel meetings, you can search the INTERNET for your congress people and other politicians it is your responsibility if you plan on improving or keep what we have, Myself I want to advance with the times which means the people may want to update our country to what would not have worked when our country was born.

Let's not look back, What is the possibilities?

Some drug dealers do pay some taxes(pharmaceutical companies)

Just my opinion

Don D. Brock

Don D. Brock of AZ @ Aug 26, 2009 14:44:58 PM

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Capital Commerce

Capital Commerce

U.S. News business reporter Matthew Bandyk examines the issues, people, and debates that shape the nexus of political and economic life in the nation's capital.

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