Because you know I'm all about that base
'Bout that base, no trouble
I'm all 'bout that base, 'bout that base, no trouble
I'm all 'bout that base, 'bout that base, no trouble
I'm all 'bout that base, 'bout that base
'Bout that base, no trouble
I'm all 'bout that base, 'bout that base, no trouble
I'm all 'bout that base, 'bout that base, no trouble
I'm all 'bout that base, 'bout that base
Sorry Meghan
Trainor, just a little spelling change
The GOP had a unique opportunity in
2018; with both houses of Congress and the presidency firmly in Republican
hands, they could pass tax-slashing legislation that really benefited the
richest in the land – the “Tax Cuts and Jobs Act” effectively lowering federal corporate tax
from 35% to 21% – and increase defense spending (plus 12%) on the biggest
ticket items without the slightest risk of losing a Congressional vote. In bed
and well under the covers with the lyingest president in American history, they
could justify their bill by making up slogans and repeating them often enough
until their constituents actually believed the falsehoods. They learned from
the most brazen of their party.
Tax cuts for the rich are “job
creators.” Rich people always take big tax windfalls and hire people to grow
their businesses. Money inserted at the top of the economic ladder will
“trickle down” and explode our already mega-successful level to new heights.
The Tax Cuts and Jobs Act would infuse so much new investment capital into the
system, create so many new jobs, that it would pay for itself and not increase
the deficit. Donald Trump has accomplished more in two years than any other
president in history. Every single sentence in this paragraph above is
completely false! And still, the majority of the GOP’s base (it no longer
belongs just to The Donald) believes every word.
While around 6% of the net economic
windfall generated by the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act was deployed as new investment
capital, that tiny effort didn’t budge the growth needle. In fact, GDP growth
numbers have recently been rejiggered… downwards! A tad was paid out to
shareholders as dividends, but the vast majority of the windfall, at least
three quarters of a trillion dollars’ worth, was used by corporate America for
stock buybacks, which in today’s world is a pretty ineffective use of capital,
particularly in 2018 right after the tax reform act passed and the stock market
exploded. The only jobs that grew were of overpaid financial advisors who
helped implement those buybacks. For more details on the inefficiency of such
stock buybacks, please reread my February 27th blog, Are
We Tired of Losing Yet? The stock market has long since gotten over
any positive spin over that tax cut.
The federal
deficit increased by $672 billion dollars in the year (2017) before the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act was passed but
ballooned to $1.271 trillion dollars
in 2018. What? You mean that Tax Cuts and Jobs Act did not pay for itself? But
that was only the first year. Surely, by 2019 that trend was going to reverse.
Not exactly. In fact, that deficit is actually accelerating now that the full
impact of that tax reform act, a permanent reduction in corporate taxes, has
settled in as the new normal.
“The federal budget deficit ballooned
rapidly in the first four months of the fiscal year amid falling tax revenue
and higher spending, the Treasury Department said Tuesday, posing a new
challenge for the White House and Congress as they prepare for a number of
budget battles… The deficit grew 77% in the first four months of fiscal 2019
compared with the same period last year, Treasury said… The total deficit for
the four-month period was $310 billion, Treasury said, up from $176 billion for
the year-earlier period.
“‘It’s big tax cuts combined with big
increases in spending when they already had big deficits,’ said former Senate
Budget Committee Chairman Kent Conrad (D-N.D), whose time in the Senate ended
in 2013. ‘So guess what, it’s craziness!’
“When Republicans seized control of
the House of Representatives during the Obama administration, lawmakers and
White House officials embarked on a number of strained negotiations to try to
reduce the gap between spending and tax revenue. During the Trump
administration, there have not been any similar discussions, and President
Trump has largely pushed for an agenda of tax cuts and spending increases that
has grown the deficit markedly.
“Tax revenue for October 2018 through
January 2019 fell $19 billion, or 2%, Treasury said. It noted a major reduction
in corporate tax payments over the first four months of the fiscal year — a decline
of nearly 25%, or $17 billion… As part of the 2017 tax cut law, the tax rate
paid by corporations was lowered to 21% from 35%... Spending, meanwhile,
increased 9% over the same period.” Los Angeles Times, March 6th.
This administration and the Party
that voted for all these inane programs may be the most economically
incompetent in modern American history. As taxpayers were grousing that their
refund checks were much smaller than expected, GOP congresspeople were
wondering how to slash social programs benefiting most of us (Social Security,
Medicare, SNAP, Medicaid, etc.) to pay for the giveaway to the rich. Even Trump
knows that would be political suicide. That deficits from wildly unbalanced
budgets and tariffs represent GOP apostasy seem to be simply swept under a
nationalist/populist rug. Fiscally conservative Republicans pretty much have no
further representation in Congress. Not that these policies particular engender
Democratic zeal.
But this soaring deficit is one of
several elephants in the room, from the impact of Brexit, Trump’s total failure
in his North Korean and Middle Eastern peace efforts, the resonant damage from
China’s sputtering economy and out-of-control debt to the unknown consequences
of Trump’s tariff wars. No one in Washington seems to know what to do about
this embarrassingly failed tax cut. It does get worse:
“The ballooning deficit comes as
interest rates are expected to begin rising, driving up the cost of borrowing
money. The U.S. is projected to spend $383 billion on interest payments for its
debt this year, and that will rise to $581 billion in 2022, according to the
Congressional Budget Office.
“There has been a total breakdown in
Washington over how to address the budget deficit. The White House has walled
off the popular Medicare and Social Security programs from any proposed cuts,
with Trump saying it would be too politically unpopular to pursue changes to
programs used by tens of millions of Americans.
“Democrats are also split over how to
proceed. The ranks of fiscal hawks have dwindled, and a newer, vocal wing of
the party has called for more deficit spending to finance social programs. Some
in that wing argue the debt is less pressing than other social maladies, such
as poverty or inadequate healthcare coverage, while others argue the debt is of
little consequence at all.
“Instead of trying to resolve their
differences, the White House and some Democrats are seeking to make the 2020
elections a referendum on economic policy, suggesting neither side is looking
to reach a compromise in the coming months… But the White House and Congress
must reach an agreement on a new spending package by Sept. 30 or face another
government shutdown… Policymakers must also reach an agreement by this fall on
raising or suspending the debt ceiling, as the government will no longer be
able to borrow money to cover many payments if Congress doesn’t act.” LA Times.
“Attention all hands, will the helmsman and the navigator report to the bridge,
immediately!”
I’m Peter Dekom, and the best proof of our
failed educational system is the vast quantity of high school and college
graduates who believe that all these GOP efforts have been successful and are
good for the overall economy.
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