Ignorance, Stupidity or Connivance?
by
Walter E. Williams
Recently
by Walter E. Williams: Job
Destruction Makes Us Richer
President Barack
Obama has called for a luxury tax on corporate jets as a means to
generate revenue to fight federal deficits. The president's economic
advisers ought to be fired for not telling him that doing so is
unwise and counterproductive. They might have already told him so,
only to have the president say, "Look, I know you're right, but
I'm exploiting the public's envy of the rich!" Let's look at what
happened when Obama's predecessor George H.W. Bush signed the Omnibus
Budget Reconciliation Act of 1990 and broke his "read my lips" vow
not to agree to new taxes.
When Congress
imposed a 10 percent luxury tax on yachts, private airplanes and
expensive automobiles, Sen. Ted Kennedy and then-Senate Majority
Leader George Mitchell crowed publicly about how the rich would
finally be paying their fair share of taxes. What actually happened
is laid out in a Heartland Institute blog post by Edmund Contoski
titled "Economically
illiterate Obama, re: Corporate Jets" (7/12/2011).
Within eight
months after the change in the law took effect, Viking Yachts, the
largest U.S. yacht manufacturer, laid off 1,140 of its 1,400 employees
and closed one of its two manufacturing plants. Before it was all
over, Viking Yachts was down to 68 employees. In the first year,
one-third of U.S. yacht-building companies stopped production, and
according to a report by the congressional Joint Economic Committee,
the industry lost 7,600 jobs. When it was over, 25,000 workers had
lost their jobs building yachts, and 75,000 more jobs were lost
in companies that supplied yacht parts and material. Ocean Yachts
trimmed its workforce from 350 to 50. Egg Harbor Yachts went from
200 employees to five and later filed for bankruptcy. The U.S.,
which had been a net exporter of yachts, became a net importer as
U.S. companies closed. Jobs shifted to companies in Europe and the
Bahamas. The U.S. Treasury collected zero revenue from the sales
driven overseas.
Back then,
Congress told us that the luxury tax on boats, aircraft and jewelry
would raise $31 million in revenue a year. Instead, the tax destroyed
330 jobs in jewelry manufacturing and 1,470 in the aircraft industry,
in addition to the thousands destroyed in the yacht industry. Those
job losses cost the government a total of $24.2 million in unemployment
benefits and lost income tax revenues. The net effect of the luxury
tax was a loss of $7.6 million in fiscal 1991, which means Congress'
projection was off by $38.6 million. The Joint Economic Committee
concluded that the value of jobs lost in just the first six months
of the luxury tax was $159.6 million.
Congress
repealed the luxury tax in 1993 after realizing it was a job killer
and raised little net revenue. Why did congressional dreams of greater
revenues turn into a nightmare? Kennedy, Mitchell and their congressional
colleagues simply assumed that the rich would act the same after
the imposition of the luxury tax as they did before and that the
only difference would be more money in the government's coffers.
Like most politicians then and now, they had what economists call
a zero-elasticity vision of the world, a fancy way of saying they
believed that people do not respond to price changes. People always
respond to price changes. The only debatable issue is how much and
over what period.
Here's my question
for you: Is it likely that in the two decades since 1990, American
human nature has changed? If Congress imposes a luxury tax on corporate
jets and other luxury items, will Americans behave differently this
time? In other words, can we expect federal tax revenues to rise
and unemployment to fall as a result of Obama's tax proposal?
I don't believe
that Obama is dumb enough to believe that a tax on corporate jets
would be a revenue generator. His agenda is to inspire envy and
resentment against wealthy Americans as a tool in pursuit of his
higher-tax agenda.
August
9, 2011
Walter
E. Williams is the John M. Olin distinguished professor of economics
at George Mason University, and a nationally syndicated columnist.
To find out more about Walter E. Williams and read features by other
Creators Syndicate columnists and cartoonists, visit the Creators
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Copyright
© 2011 Creators Syndicate, Inc.
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