This really does matter to "main street" people because taxes, government spending and all manner of other decisions are based on these guys being right.
So you have one group of old economists called "supply-siders" who believe that if you throw money at the "rich" in the form of tax cuts, economic growth and jobs will just happen.
You have another group of old economists called "Keynesians" or "demand-siders" who believe that if you throw money at the "poor" that they will generate demand and the demand will result in economic growth and jobs will just happen.
Even the Federal Reserve is governed by these old economic views, as they wasted trillions of dollars "shooting in the dark" with easy money, assuming the economy would just magically recover.
Meanwhile we have tax policies designed to solve yesterday's problems of tight labor markets (capital gains tax breaks) and idiotic internet-bubble bad business models (dividend tax breaks).
Yes, it was a good idea back in the 1900s to incent businesses to invest in capital equipment to improve productivity. It's not so good now - we are awash in productivity to such an extent that we no longer need about 25% of the available labor force in America.
Yes, it may have been a good idea back in the internet bubble to get companies to think about paying dividends instead of pursuing ridiculous, unsustainable revenue opportunities. Now - not so much.
Now we have a situation where companies can make plenty of money with very little labor and the quality jobs that are available are easily filled with cheaper resources overseas. But the supply-siders are continuing to push tax cuts and the demand-siders are continuing to push unsustainable government hand-outs.
At some point right-wingers have to say "tax cuts aren't the solution". And left-wingers have to say "government hand-outs aren't working". It's really that simple. But the left continues to move left and the right continues to move right. Here I am stuck in the middle again, in a vast un-represented waste land.
Van's List
My solutions involve eliminating laws and policies that make things worse. That is free and simple. Heres a partial list:
- Repeal Obama-care. What a load of job-killing complexity and ill-timed policy. Let's get people back to work so they can afford their own health care.
- Let the Bush tax cuts expire. There are better ways to promote quality job creation. If we're going to throw money at the problem, let's identify the problem first. One thing for sure - those who live on high investment incomes don't need lower tax rates than those who work for a living. The progressive income tax we have already provides tax breaks for lower income brackets, whether that is investment gains or earned income.
- Replace payroll taxes on both employer and employee with a revenue-neutral adjustment to the income tax, starting with the first dollar of income. That will eliminate the concept of government-sponsored retirement and health care entitlements, and encourage people to plan their own futures without government subsidies. It will also eliminate the perverse tax incentives to replace people with technology or offshore labor.
- Reduce unemployment benefits and re-direct that money to companies who will hire and train near-fit candidates from the unemployment rolls. People need incentives to work, and companies need incentives to hire and train. That's a policy that fits the economy today, and not one designed for an economy ten to one-hundred years ago.
- Eliminate all the new Obama EPA regulations and send half the EPA back to the college campuses from whence they came. Thence they can pontificate about the causes of global warming and other idealistic causes du jour.
- One more radical idea - eliminate the exemption from overtime pay for salaried employees. There is a problem today with companies eliminating jobs and piling more work on existing salaried employees. This tactic works in a stressed labor market because people have limited alternatives to longer working hours. And it is self-perpetuating by keeping the labor market stressed. By eliminating the exemption from overtime, new employees would be cheaper than overtime, and the workload and wealth of jobs would be more evenly distributed.
I believe your list is reasonable... it could work!
ReplyDeleteI also believe your list is ridiculous... is there anyone in politics using sound reason to make decisions!
Rome eventually burns to the ground, and about that time we can all (including politicians) start applying common sense and sound reason regarding our present and future course!