LOGO: Truthdig: Drilling Beneath the Headlines. A Progressive Journal of News and Opinion. Editor, Robert Scheer. Publisher, Zuade Kaufman.   Exclusive Truthdig Gifts! Mr. Fish Signed Prints and T-shirts - Gore Vidal Signed First Editions
November 29, 2009
Log in / Register

 Choose a size
Text Size

Most Read

Fred Branfman on 'The Making of an Elder Culture'

China Sets Its Greenhouse Gas Target

Global Markets Hit by Dubai's Debt Crisis

Polls Show Conservative Ahead as Honduras Vote Nears

Monsanto Dominance Prompts Antitrust Inquiry

Most Comments
Most Emailed

Reports

Ear to the Ground

A/V Booth

Arts & Culture

Digs
Financial Meltdown 101
Vetting Sarah Palin

Truthdig Bazaar
Boom!

Boom!

Tom Brokaw

more items

 
Reports

McCainomics

Email this item Email    Print this item Print   
Posted on Apr 21, 2008

By Marie Cocco

    WASHINGTON—Fittingly, and with dreadful predictability, John McCain used April 15—tax day—as the day to release his economic plan. Fittingly, and with dreadful predictability, it offers more of the same. 

    But more of the same what?

    Is it Reaganomics? Not quite. Reaganomics was premised on the magical thinking that cutting taxes, mostly for the best-off Americans, would increase revenue, improve the federal balance sheet and produce economic goodies that would trickle down to Americans from all walks of life. Does the Republican presidential prospect believe in voodoo? Not so much.

    Is it Bushonomics? This is the more debilitating version of Reaganomics we have had for the past seven years. It has been more damaging, because neither President Bush nor the Republicans who controlled Congress through most of his tenure gave a whit about cutting spending, which Reagan, from time to time, tried to do. So one of Bush’s parting gifts when he leaves the Oval Office is going to be an overhang of debt —for everything from the frenzied homeland security buildup after 9/11 to the halfhearted recovery efforts after Hurricane Katrina to the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.

    How to describe McCain’s fiscal plan? Well, it sounds an awful lot like Newt Gingrich’s Contract With America.

Advertisement

  “It’s a mind-boggling number,” Len Burman, who analyzed the McCain plan for the center, said in an interview.  That is, massive tax cuts, estimated by the Tax Policy Center of the Brookings Institution and Urban Institute to bleed as much as $7.9 trillion out of federal accounts through 2018. These would be coupled with unspecified federal budget cuts. Offsetting all these tax cuts—continuation of the existing Bush cuts, which would otherwise expire in 2010, plus more big tax cuts that McCain has put forward—would require spending reductions so deep that the government would return to the size it was during the Eisenhower administration, the Tax Policy Center estimates. “He can eliminate all domestic discretionary spending and that would pay for all his tax cuts,” Burman says.

    But McCain doesn’t tell us that. He says he would freeze spending for one year that doesn’t go to the military or veterans. This would affect everything from counterterrorism to building that fence along the Mexican border that all the presidential candidates are so enthusiastic about. Not to mention popular programs such as student aid and law enforcement. There’s also a lot of vague talk about eliminating “failed” programs—but one candidate’s failed program is always some lawmaker’s crucial home-state project. And, of course, McCain would eliminate “earmarks,” which add up to just $15 billion or so in a budget of about $3 trillion.

    McCain vows to balance the budget without “smoke and mirrors,” but his outline for doing this is awfully foggy. Cutting through this fog brings us straight to Medicare, Medicaid and Social Security. “There’s no way any budget could be balanced without [reconsidering] those programs,” McCain’s chief economic adviser, Douglas Holtz-Eakin, said in an interview. 

    Here is where McCain really sounds like he’s read the Contract With America. To pay for the gargantuan tax cuts the congressional Republicans wanted to enact in the mid-1990s, they were forced to detail gargantuan cuts in programs such as Medicare and Medicaid—cuts that President Bill Clinton refused to accept, and from which the public recoiled. That is why Clinton came out the political winner of the struggle. 

    In the end, Clinton and the Republicans did negotiate cuts in the big health care programs—but they were nothing on the order of what would have been necessary had the Republican tax cuts been enacted. The federal government began running a surplus in 1998, and did so through 2001—when Bush came along with his tax cuts and the balance sheet swung back into deficit again.

    The straight-talk candidate’s economic plan offers a ticket straight back to the same old story: tax cuts that go to individuals and businesses, which Congress (especially a Democratic Congress) will in all likelihood balk at offsetting with deep spending cuts, and which will in all likelihood end up obliterating any glimmer of hope for a bipartisan deal on the future of entitlement programs.

    Been there, done that. Don’t really want to go back to that future.
   
    Marie Cocco’s e-mail address is mariecocco(at)washpost.com.
   
    © 2008, Washington Post Writers Group


Elsewhere: .

Comments

Are you a Truthdig member yet? Login now, or register with Truthdig.

By SamSnedegar, April 24, 2008 at 11:14 am #

“...If you don’t have a clue what to do…reduce taxes….”

The premise for the “reduce taxes and increase revenues” con game is that if you give the investor more money to invest by lowering his tax rate, you create an enough higher gdp or gnp or something so that he will be PAYING MORE TAXES at the reduced rate, but it just doesn’t work that way. The increase in investment activity only produces more untaxed income, not more income subject to taxation like the supply siders claim.

See Bob Somerby for a discussion of this old canard. http://www.dailyhowler.com/

By the way, we have never increased gdp or gnp by reducing taxes, only via inflation and borrowing, and the increase doesn’t produce more revenue at all, just more debt. Think about it: the Bushitter gang of thugs reduced taxes and produced more debt than all the other presidents put together.

Report this

By PatrickHenry, April 22, 2008 at 6:39 pm #

Reganomics was also known as voodoo economics

McCainomics could be known as poo poo economics, throw enough shit and see if it sticks.

Report this

By independent, April 22, 2008 at 6:11 pm #

Federal spending is incredibly wasteful, and many non-military program could be more effectively administered at a state or local level.  I dunno, at least the plan isn’t to spend us out of debt.

Report this

By beyondthepale, April 22, 2008 at 6:05 pm #

AP Apr. 22, 2008 quotes McCain in Ohio commenting on folks in the Rust Belt -
“...they’re trying to CLING to an old economy”

That would be an economy with good permanent jobs making useful products?

I sure to hope that the media and Obama’s campaign don’t let him get away with THAT elitist condescending comment!

Report this

By beyondthepale, April 22, 2008 at 4:56 pm #
(Unregistered commenter)

Just in from AP following McCain around Ohio where he says of folks in the Rust Belt -

“...they’re trying to CLING to an old economy”

meaning an economy with good permanent jobs making useful products? shame on him! I hope Obama doesn’t let him get away with such an ELITIST CONDESCENDING comment!

Report this

By SamSnedegar, April 22, 2008 at 4:51 pm #

It’s not the economy; it’s the war, stupid!

The people want our soldiers and marines home from Iraq NOW, not in a hundred years or five hundred. The only campaign the Dimocraps have to run is one which says, “our boys and girls are coming home!”

Which is why I don’t think we will be allowed to have an election at all. All any Dimocrap would have to say to the people who elect presidents would be “I am bringing our boys home the VERY DAY I am sworn in as President,” and he’d be the victor by a landslide, so it cannot be allowed to happen.

If the Bushitter gang of thugs can destroy democracy, torture enemy personnel, spy on American citizens, use the justice department as a political weapon for punishing democrats, send American troops into battle ill equipped and then send the wounded home to horrible fates with no medical help available to them, destroy all the government controls on polluters, let the price of oil rise to $100 a barrel without blinking, and use gun barrel diplomacy as the ONLY method of dealing with other nations, then stopping elections will be a simple thing for them to do.

Report this

By SpinCycle, April 22, 2008 at 2:41 pm #

The thing is, that for Republicans tax cuts are not an economic policy.  They are Dogma.  If the economy is going up…reduce taxes.  If the economy is going down…reduce taxes.  If you don’t have a clue what to do…reduce taxes.  Ask a republican politician under what circumstances is it wise NOT to reduce taxes and you will likely get a blank stare.

Reagan perhaps genuinely believed in the Laffer Curve.  What the rest of the Republicans saw was something else…that tax reductions for the wealthy translated into gratefull contributions in the next election cycle.  The timing of all of the tax bills during republican controlled congresses in the last two decades and the start of the fundraising cycle for the next election is uncanny.

Report this

Add Your Comment

Posts by unregistered readers are moderated. Posts by members
are published immediately. Why wait? Register today!







Number of characters remaining: 4000

Notify you when others comment on this article?


Are you a human?
Retype the word you see here.


Please read and abide by our comment policy.
By submitting this comment, you agree to this site's terms and conditions.

 
 

 
Join the Liberal Blog Advertising Network
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

A Progressive Journal of News and Opinion. Editor, Robert Scheer. Publisher, Zuade Kaufman.
Copyright © 2009 Truthdig, L.L.C. All rights reserved.