Money for Nothing, or Worse
by
Robert Higgs
by Robert Higgs
Suppose
you picked up your Wall Street Journal one morning and saw
an article on the front page with the following set of headlines:
Ford Reports Its Current Models Have Been Bigger Busts than
the Edsel; Ford Stock Soars 500 Percent; Investors Dancing in Wall
Street. Then, turning to the editorial page, you found the
editors expressing the view that in light of Fords announcement,
Wall Streets celebration is well warranted. Youd
be inclined to check the date, wondering whether an April Fools
joke was being played. Bad news normally does not elicit such gladness.
A
real-life case of such a dissonant reaction appeared recently in
the Journal, however, when the editors concluded in their
Review & Outlook column for August 17, 2005, that we
can celebrate a dramatically improved short- and medium-term fiscal
picture. What aspects of that picture struck them as worthy
of celebration?
Strange
to say, they were reacting to the Congressional Budget Offices
release of its August 2005 Budget and Economic Outlook
update. This hefty report, the product of too many government statisticians
equipped with too much computing power, presents a number of budgetary
and economic projections running as far out as 2015. Those extending
more than six months into the future are probably not worth the
paper they are printed on, because they are based on manifestly
false assumptions, and those for the shorter term are scarcely any
more valuable, because they tell us little more than what we already
know. One reasonably hard figure in all the tables and
charts, however, the one that set off the Journals
celebration, is that federal revenues will be $262 billion greater
in fiscal year 2005 than they were in fiscal year 2004. The Journals
editors describe this change cheerfully as the largest single-year
increase in tax revenues in American history.
Truly,
we have here a man bites dog story. All regular readers
of the Wall Street Journal know that the editors consistently
support only two federal policies: first, bombing other countries;
second, reducing federal taxes. Bizarrely, however, the editors
seem to take pleasure in the conjecture that a large share
of this years revenue gusher is coming from higher than expected
capital gains and dividend tax receipts and therefore that
the lower tax rates on investment income may have paid for
themselves.
Lets
see if Ive got this straight. Last year I walked home from
work each day with a dollar in my pocket, but before I reached my
door a mugger invariably accosted me and demanded 50 cents or my
life, whereupon I paid him the 50 cents. This year I walk home each
day with two dollars in my pocket, and the mugger demands 75 cents,
which I proceed to cough up. But just think: I now make it home
each day with $1.25 in my pocket, whereas last year I got there
with just 50 cents. Thank heavens for this years lower effective
tax rate of 37.5 percent, down from last years 50 percent.
Moreover, not only do I have more of my money left after the armed
robber has come and gone, but the mugger also now enjoys a dramatically
improved short- and medium-term fiscal picture.
The
Journals editors note that tax revenue as a share
of the economy is climbing back to normal levels, from 17.5
percent of GDP this year toward the 17.9 percent postwar average.
We all know that normal is good. Moreover, the federal deficit has
also declined to close to its modern average and will be approximately
2.7 percent of GDP in fiscal year 2005. Soon, if this movement persists,
well arrive at the wondrously normal levels of 2.4 percent
next year and 2.0 percent in 2010, even if the Bush tax rates
stay in place. The deficit would decline even faster but for
the continuing spending orgy on Capitol Hill, which
the editors pause briefly to decry. Federal expenditures are galloping
upward by some 7 percent annually, as no doubt befits a nation with
so many unmet needsneeds, that is, to keep the
most politically potent rent-seekers and freeloaders at ease by
giving them more and more of the money other people have earned.
Lets
get real. According to the CBOs report, in the current fiscal
year the U.S. government is gorging on some $2,142 billion of revenues,
consisting of taxes, fees, charges, fines, and other species of
extractions from the peoples purses. This sum works out to
approximately $7,500 for every man, woman, and child resident in
this country, or $30,000 for a family of four average persons. Perhaps
some of those people feel they are getting benefits worth at least
this much. I myself dont have that feeling.
Nor
am I pleased to know that this year the feds will extract an additional
$910 for every man, woman, and child in the country, compared to
last year. To put the question in Reaganesque terms, Do you feel
that the federal government is giving you $910 more in benefits
this year than it gave you last year? Or do you have that sneaking
feeling that each year the government transforms its increment of
revenue into even more ways to squander your earnings and deprive
you of your liberties?
As
I see the matter, the federal government ran out of useful and constitutionally
warranted things to do sometime back in the nineteenth century.
Since then, federal politicians have been casting about for other
things to do, regardless of those projects economic justification
or constitutional legitimacy. In the past seventy-five years, the
politicos have become diabolically good at locating such sinkholes
for expenditures. They cant take a step now without plunging
into one of them.
So
desperate have the members of Congress become in their never-ending
quest to outbid the rival charlatans running against them for election
that they have extended massive funding to such questionable projects
as the military obliteration of small, remote countries inhabited
by brown-skinned people and the lavish support of wealthy retirees
ensconced in the condos of south Florida and Arizona. Methinks they
may have gone too far.
Indeed,
what the Wall Street Journals editors see as a cause
for celebration may be instead a reason for righteous indignation,
or even for joining your neighbors in taking up pitchforks and heading
for the District of Columbia to clean out those Augean stables.
August
25, 2005
Robert
Higgs [send him mail] is
senior fellow in political economy at the Independent
Institute and editor of The
Independent Review. His most recent book is Against
Leviathan.
Copyright
© 2005 Independent Institute
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