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Los Angeles Times
Bush Proves He's an Upper-Class Act
Under his tax plan, the only winners are the economic elite.
January 7, 2003
The president calls it a "jobs and growth" plan, but it's neither.
His latest round of proposed tax cuts won't create jobs and won't grow the
economy. It will only do more of what his last round did -- make the rich
even richer.
The economic problem right now is too much capacity relative to demand. Too
many factories are idle, too much equipment isn't being used, too many people
don't have jobs. The nation is having a hard time coming out of its slump
because there still aren't enough buyers for all the goods and services the
American economy can produce.
But there's also a long-term problem, and it's as much a social problem as
an economic one: We're splitting into three separate societies.
At the top is a regal class with more wealth and income than any aristocracy
has ever had. They're also receiving a bigger slice of America's total income
now than at any time in the last 60 years. In the middle is a big, anxious
class that's just a bit better off than a decade ago but still having trouble
making ends meet. At the bottom is a large underclass whose income and sparse
wealth declined through the 1980s and mid-1990s, then picked up in the late
'90s when the national rate of unemployment dipped to 4% and employers had to
scrounge to find workers. Now that the official rate of unemployment is back
at 6%, the underclass is falling backward again.
The short-term problem is related to the long-term one. For years, American
productivity has been rising at a healthy clip. Computer and Internet
technologies have dramatically increased our capacity to produce more goods
and services. That's a major reason why the economy could grow so quickly in
the '90s without igniting inflation.
Alan Greenspan deserves credit for recognizing this when he allowed
short-term interest rates to fall and unemployment to drop. Despite the
"irrational exuberance" that caused stock prices to soar in the late 1990s
and plummet between 2000 and now, the productivity revolution continues.
That's why our businesses have all that new capacity.
But here's the rub. All the goods and services that can now be produced have
to be bought by someone. Individual consumers account for two-thirds of
what's purchased in the nation. And because of the productivity revolution, a
lot of items can be made cheaper. But they're not so cheap that consumers can
afford to buy all of them on paychecks that haven't gone anywhere.
The only people whose pay has skyrocketed are at the very top. They're
spending princely sums on exotic vacations, mansions in the Hamptons and
cashmere sweaters. But they spend only a fraction of the money they have. The
much-larger anxious class doesn't have a lot of discretionary income after
paying for utilities, food and housing. The underclass has virtually none.
The recession that just ended was relatively mild because most consumers in
the anxious and under classes kept on spending despite their fragile
finances. But to do so, they had to go deep in debt and work longer hours.
Now they're worried about unsteady jobs, shrinking 401(k) retirement savings
and war.
It looks as if their buying binge is over. Consumer confidence has dropped
six out of the last seven months. The Christmas buying season was a bust.
So where's the demand for all the goods and services the U.S. can produce to
come from? Foreigners won't and can't buy up what's left. The world's
second-largest economy, Japan, is flat on its back; the third-largest,
Germany, is sliding into recession. Much of the rest of the world is in no
shape to go on a buying spree.
So now comes President Bush's much-vaunted economic plan. It mainly cuts
taxes on the royal class. Its members own most shares of stock, so reducing
taxes on stock dividends is a boon for them. According to the IRS, more than
60% of the total value of dividends paid to individuals in 1999 went to the
top 10% of taxpayers. The royal class also gains the most from accelerating
the income tax cuts enacted in 2001 because most of the benefits originally
scheduled to take effect after 2004 went to the highest earners. And they're
the ones who reap almost all the benefits from a permanent repeal of the
estate tax, which would affect only estates worth more than $1 million. Yet
the members of the royal class are spending about as much as they want to
spend. No amount of extra money in their diamond-studded pocketbooks will
cause them to spend much more.
The president's plan responds to the nation's two overarching economic
problems -- overcapacity and widening inequality -- by worsening both. It's a
remarkable achievement, made all the more remarkable by the utter cynicism
with which it's being marketed.
It's not a plan for "growth and jobs." It's a plan for rewarding the rich
when what the economy needs is more spending by people of modest means. And
it further concentrates wealth and power at a time when wealth and power are
already in fewer and fewer hands.
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