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Bold Obama Plan Sweeps Away
Reagan-Bush inequality Giving to
Rich, Taking from Poor
WASHINGTON (By David Leonhardt,
NYT) February 27, 2009
—
The budget President Obama proposed
yesterday is nothing less than an
attempt to end a three-decade era of
economic policy dominated by the
ideas of Ronald Reagan and his
supporters.
The Obama budget — a bold, even
radical departure from recent
history, wrapped in bureaucratic
formality and statistical tables —
would sharply raise taxes on the
rich, beyond where Bill Clinton had
raised them. It would reduce taxes
for everyone else, to a lower point
than they were under Mr. Clinton.
And it would lay the groundwork for
sweeping changes in health care and
education, among other areas.
More than anything else, the
proposals seek to reverse the rapid
increase in economic inequality over
the last 30 years. They do so first
by rewriting the tax code and, over
the longer term, by trying to solve
some big causes of the middle-class
income slowdown, like high medical
costs and slowing educational gains.
After Mr. Obama spent much of his
first five weeks in office
responding to the financial crisis,
his budget effectively tried to
reclaim momentum for the priorities
on which he campaigned.
His efforts would add to a budget
deficit already swollen by Mr.
Bush’s policies and the recession,
creating the largest deficit,
relative to the size of the economy,
since World War II. Erasing that
deficit will require some tough
choices — about further spending
cuts and tax increases — that Mr.
Obama avoided this week.
But he nonetheless made choices.
He sought to eliminate some
corporate subsidies, for health
insurers, banks and agricultural
companies, economists have long
criticized. He proposed putting a
price on carbon, to slow global
warming, and then refunding most of
the revenue from that program
through broad-based tax cuts. He
called for roughly $100 billion a
year in tax increases on the wealthy
— mostly delayed until 2011, when
the recession will presumably have
ended — and $50 billion a year in
net tax cuts for the non-wealthy.
The history of the United States
economy over the last 70 years can
be roughly divided into two periods:
the decades immediately after World
War II, when inequality plummeted,
and the past three decades, when
global economic forces and
government policies caused it to
soar. Mr. Obama is setting out to
begin a third period that looks more
like the first than the second.
That agenda starts with taxes. Over
the last three decades, the pretax
incomes of the wealthiest households
have risen far more than they have
for other households, while the tax
rates for top earners have fallen
more than they have for others,
according to the Congressional
Budget Office.
As a result, the average post-tax
income of the top 1 percent of
households has jumped by roughly $1
million since 1979, adjusted for
inflation, to $1.4 million. Pay for
most families has risen only
slightly faster than inflation.
Before becoming Mr. Obama’s top
economic adviser, Lawrence H.
Summers liked to tell a hypothetical
story to distill the trend. The
increase in inequality, Mr. Summers
would say, meant each family in the
bottom 80 percent of the income
distribution was effectively sending
a $10,000 check, every year, to the
top 1 percent of earners.
Mr. Obama’s budget reflects that
sensibility. Budget experts were
still sorting through the details on
Thursday, but it appeared various
tax cuts and credits aimed at the
middle class and the poor would
increase the take-home pay of the
median household by roughly $800.
The tax increases on the top 1
percent, meanwhile, will most likely
cost them $100,000 a year.
“The tax code will become more
progressive, with relatively higher
rates on the rich and relatively
lower rates on the middle class and
poor,” said Roberton Williams, a
senior fellow at the Tax Policy
Center in Washington. “This is
reversing the effects of the Bush
policies,” he added, and then going
even further.
And just as Franklin D. Roosevelt’s
tax increases on the wealthy
followed a stock market crash, which
had already depressed their incomes,
Mr. Obama’s proposals — if they
become law — would too. The
combination has the potential to
reverse a significant portion of the
inequality trends of the last few
decades.
But for the country to repeat the
post-World War II pattern, the
incomes of most families would also
have to begin rising at a faster
rate than they have since the 1970s.
That outcome remains deeply
uncertain. Economists who study
economic growth say the American
economy is unlikely to grow nearly
as fast in coming years as in the
1950s and ’60s.
Mr. Obama would try to lift the
incomes of the middle class and poor
through two main channels,
administration officials said. The
first is an overhaul of health care,
meant to reduce the insurance
premiums now taking a large bite out
of many families’ paychecks.
The details remain vague, but the
budget begins paying for investments
that would eventually allow Medicare
officials to refuse to pay for
medical treatment that does not show
evidence of improving health. If
successful, that change would vastly
reduce the government’s long-term
budget deficit. It is also likely to
bring down private health costs,
since insurers typically follow
Medicare’s lead.
The other channel is education. Over
the last three decades, the pay of
college graduates has risen
significantly faster than the pay of
less-educated workers. Mr. Obama
aims to move workers into the first
category by increasing federal
financial aid and simplifying the
myriad of aid programs. In recent
years, the United States has lost
its standing as the country in which
the largest share of young adults
graduates from college.
“Low- and middle-income kids often
don’t aspire to college,” Peter
Orszag, director of the Office of
Management and Budget, said
Thursday. “They hear ‘$40,000
tuition’ and think that’s
impossible.”
There are still many outstanding
questions about Mr. Obama’s efforts,
starting with whether Congress will
pass a budget that looks anything
like his.
His proposals on health care are
likely to meet stiff opposition from
some doctors and insurers. Spending
more money on financial aid — absent
other changes to the education
system — may not lift the graduation
rate very much. And if the economy
remains weak into next year, as many
forecasters expect, Congressional
Republicans will try to pin the
blame on the looming tax increases
on the affluent.
Whatever happens, though, it has
been a long time since any president
has tried to use his budget to shape
the government and the economy quite
as much as Mr. Obama did on
Thursday. On that score, he and
President Reagan have something in
common.
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