Getting back to CCP on a great post over on Media Issues:
http://dogbrothers.com/phpBB2/index.php?topic=1066.msg65512#msg65512The questions posed partly apply to a number of threads, Pres 2012, but I thought I would take it up here.
Excerpt from CCP:
"... Today Art Laffer was on FOX and was asked specifically and directly an important question that goes to the heart of today's neo civil war.
He was asked why is should people believe that "trickle down" economics is better for the majority of people? Do not the rich keep getting richer and the rest of the people stagnate? Why not increase tax rates on higher earners, Clinton did it and the economy boomed. Laffer was a complete failure at articulating a logical rational simple response that most people would agree to.
I guarantee Doug McG would do a far better job at answering these questions ina way the average could understand and immediately agree to.
I do not understand why these core questions are not being answered by the MR team. All they do is talk "jobs", the "debt", and other buzz words that DO NOT specify why history proves them/us right and the socialists wrong.
If they can learn to answer these types of questions then the game is won. ..."
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First off, it warms the heart to receive a nice compliment like that, but I am an armchair commenter compared to a legend like Prof. Laffer.
Explaining freedom is quite a challenge and quite a skill is required. I struggle to write the posts here but the act of trying helps me to have thought these questions through when the issues come up in real conversations and debates. Every once in a while someone lays out the freedom argument so plain and simple that it all makes sense. Reagan had that gift. Gilder in Wealth and Poverty. Having government do less is not sexy and easy to sell. I remember Jack Kemp saying what we need is not a war against the rich, we need more people to become rich.
Speaking to the opposite, the crony government state case I think is much easier to make. I remember Pres. Bill Clinton's state of the unions always went like this for about 100 minutes: we can do more for police (not a federal function), we can do more for teachers (not a federal function), we can do more for infrastructure (largely not a federal function), we can do more for struggling parents (some targeted program you have no shot at ever seeing) and so on. How about cure diseases, how can anyone oppose any of that?
Bill Clinton in Charlotte said that a potential Romney administration would be a "double down on trickle down".
Trickle down is a lie in itself and a straw argument. Trickle down is a term only used by people who oppose growth economics and want wealth creation slowed and punished.
There is no tax proposal on the table now or ever to give something to rich people in the hopes that it will trickle down to working people.
The rich do not pay less, that is a fallacy. The top 20% of earners make 50% of the income and pay 70% of the taxes.
Extending tax cuts or creating new ones "gives" nothing to anyone. A tax rate only defines what portion you can keep out of what you earn. "Gifts" are on the spending, entitlements and welfare side of the ledger with no legitimacy on the tax side. The deception is intentional.
We live and operate in a interconnected and interdependent economy. Labor depends on capital just as capital depends on labor. These are not different people. As it turned out in the gulf oil spill, the number one class of share holders of British Petroleum turned out to be the pensioners of Britain. A store or a service company relies on customers, and suppliers. Anyone can start a company, buy a share of stock or apply for a job in a free economy. We do not have classes of people, middle or otherwise. In fact, 70% of children did not end up in their parent's quintile of income.
We just lived through one of the greatest attacks on capital possible and we learned that when you handcuff investors and threaten them with greater and greater penalties for accomplishment, labor is hurt the worst. An investor who pulls back his money still has most of his money, but the people who would have worked there do not have those jobs or any other if the problems is all across the economy. A downside to federal control of industry and economy. Today the stock market is glowing in value, barriers to entry block out potential competition for the listed and entrenched companies, while the labor market is in the tank. Unemployment is at roughly 20% if you count people working part time that can't find full time and count the increase of people leaving the workforce among the unemployed.
What is the Obama administration doing wrong? 50,000 new regulations in 42 months and threatening to raise all relevant tax rates. Uncertainty in all regards is at third world levels.
Example: The new federal definition of a full time employee is eighteen pages long. http://washingtonexaminer.com/feds-need-18-pages-to-define-full-time-for-obamacare/article/2507528 Why is that important? Number of full time employees is a key criteria in the plethora of federal strangulations. Please search the article posted on 'why there are so many 49 employee companies in France' for a clue.
It is not "trickle down" to take an already progressive tax code and lower and simplify the rates for everyone across the board. It is pro-growth or supply side economics.
Marco Rubio for one has been consistently clear on this. Romney and Ryan, sometimes.
You cannot balance the budget or solve the unemployment crisis without encouraging robust job creation in the private sector. For every government idea or piece of legislation you need to ask one question: what does this do to grow jobs in the private sector? A surcharge on millionaires, does that grow jobs? No. Does increasing progressivity in the tax code grow jobs? No. An Obamacare excise tax on all medical device sales, does this grow jobs? No. Blocking the drilling in ANWR and blocking a pipeline from Canada, does this grow jobs? No. QE4 and another round of not exactly shovel ready crony expenditures, does this grow jobs across the board? No. 50,000 new regulations, does this grow jobs? No. Taking over an entire industry to bureaucratic control, stifling innovation, does this grow jobs? No. Regulations for public leave, plant closing notices, mandatory health coverages, does this kind of well intentioned do-gooding grow jobs? No.
Does a better policy toward allowing energy production help employment in that industries and nearly all other industries? Yes. Do lower, simpler and more predicable marginal rates on income help job creation? Yes. Would getting our corporate down from worst in the world help job creation in America? Yes. Would eliminating all unnecessary regulations at the federal level increase job creation? Yes.
Is there anything in the past, present or future Obama agenda that across the board falls on the side of growing jobs? No.
Is the entire original Romney 59 point economic plan all about increasing job creation? Yes.
You can't stomp out capital formation and economic freedom and put the focus on government controlled equality of outcomes without hurting employment and job creation. I don't know how to say that in a way that persuades anyone not inclined to believe it, but it is empirically true.
Going back to the original quotation: "Why not increase tax rates on higher earners, Clinton did it and the economy boomed."
This is not true. Clinton raised taxes in his first action and the economy only sputtered ahead, a very weak recovery. When he switched to the Dick Morris triangulate tact, he lowered capital gains tax rates, ended welfare as we knew it and deregulated industries. Also he passed hemisphere-wide free trade with majority R support and majority D opposition. It is quite a clever buffoon in Clinton to now tell us that job growth then, in the tens of millions, was a victory of Democratic policies over Republican policies in the context of the 2012 election choices.
As it was said of the Clintons at the time, they lie with such ease.