Back in 2004, President Bush rejected John Kerry's plans to roll back the tax cuts for the wealthiest Americans, arguing, "The really rich people figure out how to dodge taxes anyway." Now five years later, 1980's supply side snake oil salesman Arthur Laffer is back to resurrect the Bush claim. Barack Obama will raise taxes on lower and middle class Americans, Laffer now insists, because the rich are too smart to pay them.
That moment of conservative clarity came during Laffer's appearance Saturday on Fox News' Journal Editorial Report with the WSJ's Paul Gigot. In response to President Obama's promise kept on the largest middle class tax cut in history and budget proposal to return to Clinton-era rates for upper income earners, Gigot and Laffer concluded "we [are] entering a new era of much higher taxes." And Obama will raise taxes on lower income Americans because, Laffer pronounced this weekend before the so-called Tax Day Tea Parties, "it cannot be done at the high end because those people can get away from it."
Laffer's belief that working Americans will have to pay higher taxes because the wealthy won't is neatly summed up in this exchange (video here):
GIGOT: Well, how are they going to go? It's now 35% top marginal income tax rate. Under Clinton it was up to 39.6%, and that's how high President Obama says he's willing to let it go. But in the past, as you know, they were as high as 70% before Reagan came into office, and even 90% under Roosevelt. How high are they going to go?
LAFFER: That's right. I don't know how high they're going to go. But I'll bet you they're going to go a lot, lot higher than 40%. I think they're going to extend the payroll tax. I mean, when you look at the income tax, Paul, I mean, you really can't collect much money from upper-income people. They know how to get around taxes. So if you want to raise revenues, you've got to do it in low-level, broad-based taxes. That includes the income tax, that includes the payroll tax, that includes sales taxes. So would I guess they're going to really go after these the low-level, high-revenue-base taxes in the next four or five years.
Of course, when it comes to tax evasion, the rich will always be with us. And due to the successful efforts of Phil Gramm and other Republican class warriors in their 1990's war on the IRS, the losses to the U.S. Treasury have reached epic proportions. Thanks to the GOP's gutting of the IRS, by 2007 the amount of federal revenue lost to fraud and unpaid taxes catapulted to 300 billion dollars. As David Cay Johnston detailed in his book, Perfectly Legal, when the tax man cometh, he cometh for poorer Americans:
"In 1999, for the first time, the poor were more likely than the rich to have their tax returns audited. The overall rate for people making less than $25,000 a year was 1.36%, compared with 1.15% of returns by those making $100,000 or more...Over the previous 11 years audit rates for the poor had increased by a third, while falling 90 percent for the top tier of Americans."
For Arthur Laffer, the remedy to upper class tax fraud isn't heightened enforcement, but lower tax rates. For their clever tax avoidance, both legitimate and criminal, wealthy Americans should not punished, but rewarded. Sadly, this kind of blinkered thinking - irrational, illogical and immoral - doesn't merely pass for orthodoxy among the conservative faithful, it is given credence in the mainstream media.
As the New Republic's Jonathan Chait detailed, we've been here before with Arthur Laffer. In his 2007 book, The Big Con: The True Story of How Washington Got Hoodwinked and Hijacked by Crackpot Economics, Chait charts Laffer's course from failed OMB bureaucrat to prophet of the supply-side revolution. Having "left the government in disgrace" after producing calamitously wrong GDP predictions, Laffer paired with columnist Jude Wanniski to help birth the Reagan revolution:
Adherents of supply-side economics tend to describe the spread of their creed in quasi-religious terms. Irving Kristol subsequently wrote in a memoir, "It was Jude [Wanniski] who introduced me to Jack Kemp, a young congressman and a recent convert. It was Jack Kemp who, almost single-handed, converted Ronald Reagan to supply-side economics." The theological language is fitting because supply-side economics is not merely an economic program. It's a totalistic ideology. The core principle is that economic performance hinges almost entirely on how much incentive investors and entrepreneurs have to attain more wealth, and this incentive in turn hinges almost entirely on their tax rate. Therefore, cutting taxes-- especially those of the rich, who carry out the decisive entrepreneurial role in the economy--is always a good idea.
Of course, the famous Laffer curve, with its magical claim that "that at higher levels of taxation, reducing the tax rate would produce more revenue for the government," is historically and empirically false. Reagan, after all, was forced to raise taxes twice after his supply-side cuts produced a mountain of red inks. As it turned out, U.S. national debt tripled under Ronald Reagan, only to double again under his upper income tax cutting heir George W. Bush. (So much for the myth of Republican fiscal discipline.) Despite its failure, the eventual 2008 Republican presidential John McCain drank the Kool-Aid, declaring, "tax cuts, starting with Kennedy, as we all know, increase revenues." In response to President Obama's call to end the Bush tax cuts for those earning over $250,000 a year, Texas Republican Senator Kay Bailey Hutchison offered the purest statement of Arthur Laffer's fantasy:
"Every major tax cut we've had in history has created more revenue."
And so it goes. A generation after he helped engineer both a massive redistribution of wealth and a five-fold increase in American national debt, Arthur Laffer is at again. Peddling his new book, The End of Prosperity: How Higher Taxes Will Doom the Economy--If We Let It Happen, Laffer's message is a simple one: leave the rich alone.
Sadly for Arthur Laffer, wealthier Americans voted with their wallets - for Barack Obama. Four years after George W. Bush carried those earning over $200,000 by 63% to 35%, Obama comfortably beat John McCain among the same group by 52% to 46% As the raging right prepares for its April 15 orgy of tea bagging, public opinion is not with them. While a CBS/New York Times poll last week showed three-quarters of American back Obama's call to restore the upper income tax rate, a new Gallup survey revealed Americans' "views of income taxes among most positive since 1956."
** Crossposted at Perrspectives **
UPDATE: Almost on cue, Laffer offers his congratulations to that most splendiferous tea bagger, Glenn Beck.