Giving the Boot to the Tax-Cut Era
Politicians say slashing taxes is no longer a vote getter
Status quo. For now, the major GOP presidential candidates are going no further than vowing to preserve the Bush tax cuts due to expire in 2010 despite the electoral success tax cutting has brought the party in the past. Rep. Paul Ryan, ranking minority member of the House Budget Committee, sees the same lack of enthusiasm on Capitol Hill and thinks he knows why it seems so widespread. "It's the political consultants in the party," he says. "They're the ones who are advising [Republicans] to run away from this issue."
If so, then those consultants may merely be relaying what the polls are saying. They're hinting that America's great fever for lower taxesignited in 1978 with the passage of California's Proposition 13 and a successful push by Republican Rep. William Steiger to cut capital-gains taxeshas cooled.
Recent polls of Americans' major concerns show taxes nowhere near the top. In a recent CNN/Opinion Research poll, taxes didn't rank as a pressing concern, with only 31 percent describing them as "extremely important" vs. 44 percent for healthcare policy. And a CBS poll found that Americans have a case of the blahs about the 2001 tax cuts, with 39 percent saying they should be made permanent and the same percentage in favor of allowing them to expire.
To some extent, tax cutters are victims of their own success. The top marginal income tax rate was 70 percent when Ronald Reagan took office in 1981. Today, it's half that, with the brackets indexed for inflation. Tax revenue as a percentage of gross domestic product18.4 percent in 2006is about at its historical average, possibly hinting that tax rates are more or less where they should be. According to the Tax Foundation, the number of taxpayers who either had no income tax liabilityor had none after taking advantage of the code's many credits and deductionshas surged since 2000 from 30 million to 42 million in 2004.
Another possible reason for tax-cut apathy is that after the 2001 tax cuts were passed, there was no economic boom. Instead, what voters saw was a big tax cut signed in 2001, lousy GDP growth in 2002, and the budget surplus turn into a big deficit that is only now shrinking. "So not only did those tax cuts not seem to work," says Pat Toomey, president of the pro-tax-cut Club for Growth, "they seemed to be counterproductive." (Interestingly, an economic simulation run by Goldman Sachs predicts the economy will fall into a recession in 2011 if all the tax cuts are allowed to expire, even with massive Federal Reserve interest rate cuts.)
One escape clause from this scenario: If tax revenues keep pouring in, the budget could move back into the black in the near future, say 2009, and generate pressure to send that extra dough back home. "Congress hates surpluses," says budget expert Richard Kogan of the left-of-center Center on Budget and Policy Priorities. Longer term, there seems to be a cycle of big tax cuts every generation. There was Kennedy's tax cut passed in 1964, Reagan's in 1981, and Bush's in 2001 and 2003. So pay attention, Chelsea Clinton, George P. Bush, and other possible future politicos, tax cuts could be back on the agenda in 2032.
advertisement

