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Supply-Side Economics in Fact and Fancy
Supply-side economics is a hearty perennial, one that closely follows the election cycle. Every four years ambitious Republican politicians (and not a few ‘centrist’ Democrats) rediscover that the wealthy would like to pay less in taxes. But the rhetoric of politics does inhibit the wealthy, their kept intellectuals, and paid spokesmen from arguing their case directly. In democracies, even those resembling plutocracies, the rich must present their own interests as coinciding with the general good.
With this in mind, and yet still aspiring to a tax cut, the wealthy have lavishly supported ‘astroturf’ political organizations and ‘think tanks’ which, in turn, hire photogenic and eloquent spokespersons to present their case to the public. In its best form, the argument is that tax cuts for the rich will: (1) increase the national savings rate because the wealthy save a larger percentage of their incomes than others. This increased quantity of savings will (2) provide the funds required to spur business investment in plant and equipment. From this it follows that (3) supply-side tax cuts will have the effect of providing strong economic growth, which will “trickle down” to the “regular guy.” We are assured that not only are these propositions true, but that they were proven decisively during the Reagan Administration.
Let’s look up the figures. The key to this theory is in steps 1 & 2, describing a causal relationship between lower tax rates and increased private investment. Our starting point, or baseline, will be the average of what is called "net private domestic investment" over President Jimmy Carter's four years (1977-1980), which we will compare to the average across the four years of President Ronald Reagan’s second term (1985-1988). The reason to select the former years is that they are widely recalled as having been dismal. Indeed, we have been repeatedly told that they were so bad that voters granted Reagan a mandate to pursue supply-side economic policies. Likewise, the latter years are selected as the effects of the enormous tax cuts enacted during Reagan’s first term should have had their strongest effect during his second term. Selecting data from Reagan’s second term allows us to set aside the economy’s abysmal performance during his first term with its devastating recession -- the worst that occurred between the Great Depression and the Crash of 2008. In addition, by Reagan’s second term the wealthy should have had ample opportunity to adjust to their lower tax rates.
When we look up the figures on the official National Income and Product Accounts, we find that “net private domestic investment” did not increase. On the contrary, it declined from an average of 7.0% of total Gross Domestic Product during Carter’s four years to an average of 5.7% during Reagan’s second term. More shockingly, if we factor out inflation, we find that the real dollar amount of investment fell slightly despite the fact that the American economy of the late 1980s was over 17% larger than the late 1970s. To put it mildly, this is a powerful refutation of the supply-side story.
But, proponents might respond, surely overall savings rose as a consequence of the lower tax rates? Let us check. Comparing the averages over these same two four-year periods, consumption as a share of total National Income increased from 64.8% to 67.2%. Because the median American income for a full time year-round employee declined between 1980 and 1988 (from $34,483 to $34,253 in constant 1994 dollars according to the Bureau of the Census), this increase in the nation’s consumption was most likely undertaken by persons in the upper echelons of the income distribution.
In light of facts presented in the previous two paragraphs, we are ready to sum up. President Ronald Reagan's supply-side economic policies left us with more consumption on the part of the wealthy, a lower savings rate, less net private sector investment, and a lower median income for a full-time year-round worker. These who lived through those years will not be surprised by these numbers, as conspicuous consumption on the part of the wealthy was a dominant and widely-noted theme of that era.
The ‘moral of the story’ is that proponents of more tax cuts for the rich will have to argue that its beneficial effects are very gradual, occurring only after an orgy of increased expenditure on the part of the policy’s immediate beneficiaries. Alternatively, they could argue that the National Income and Product Accounts put together by the Bureau of Economic Analysis at the Department of Commerce are profoundly flawed. Finally, they could drop the pretense that the Reagan years are an affirmation of their favored theory. The numbers presented above and the conclusions they point to simply cannot be sidestepped. If tax cuts for the wealthy are good for savings, investment, and the incomes of “regular guys” (that is to say the median earner), then some precedent other than the Reagan years will have to be invoked.


32 Comments so far
Show AllAnyone who thinks that the Reagan era policies were actually intended to benefit the majority is a completely deluded fool. What has happened is EXACTLY what they wanted to happen. The middle class has been decimated, the upper 2% has been enriched well beyond their wildest dreams, and for the first time in our history as a country, the up coming generation will NOT do better than the previous one.
The IDIOCY of trickle down should have been obvious to anyone who was really paying attention back in 1980. It was to me, and I'm NOT a trained economist by ANY stretch of the imagination. Why ANYONE would believe that giving the greediest of your society more than they would ever need would make them act like human beings is just beyond me. It's never happened before, to think that it will anytime soon is an exercise in foolishness. If anything, the rich need to pay out the butt for the damage they cause to society, not be rewarded for it.
Sorry, but kissing rich people's butts is not an action that you will see me taking anytime soon. Kicking them would be more like it, given the opportunity. They declared war on us, I say we take it to their doors and be done with it. There are a hell of a lot more of US than there are of them...
Agreed with one very small correction: this is now the *second* generation to not do as well as their parents. Don't forget Generation X.
Reaganomics are policies concocted by Reagan who had a incapacitated mind, Alzheimer's. Furthermore, the Repubican Party has adopted the philosophy of Ayn Rand, a amphetamine addict.These policies and philosophy have been adopted and the result is a dysfunctional society and government and people wonder why. It's no mystery, any country the size of the USA which is governed by the policies of Reagan's incapacitated mind and Ayn Rands amphetamine induced rants are the recipe's for failure.She is someone who books are so boring, they are dysfunctional. This is what guides our society.
For more fun facts and figures, read The Shock Doctrine by Naomi Klein, which documents what happens when "supply side economics" and "free markets" are pushed to their limit. Nuff said.
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In the 1980s I looked at the effects of the Reagan tax cuts on my financial situation. I compared my income (as a relatively new college teacher) and the taxes I paid before and after the tax cuts. My income was nearly flat at the time but my taxes went up more than my income did.
One reason my taxes went up was that to mollify the middle class as the rich were getting an enormous tax break, we were told that a lot of loopholes were being eliminated. That was true: the ability to deduct the interest on consumer loans (cars, credit cards, etc.) was eliminated. Without those deductions, I could not deduct as much as before, so my taxes went up (not a lot, but they did go up).
The fact that multi-millionaires could not deduct the cost of their cattle ranches as easily as before did not make my situation any easier. After all, my tax rate did not drop from about 70% to about 40%. You have to have a lot of cattle to get the equivalent of a 30% drop in taxes.
I think what they originally meant by "Trickle Down" was that the Rich could more or less do a "Number One" and pee on everyone not rich. The Rich-owned large corporations such as BP and last year's oil spill maybe extends this metaphor into the "Number Two" category.
I think its time that we reexamine this system of plumbing, and maybe reverse the flow!
well said...
Here here...
well said...
there there...
"The Rich-owned large corporations such as BP and last year's oil spill maybe extends this metaphor into the "Number Two" category." Lets call these corporations what they really are. They are corporate crime syndicates for the investor class.
I don't understand why supply-side theory is still alive. Perhaps in academic economics circles it isn't; I'm not up enough on that to say. But when I learned macroecon, the New Economy (high growth/full employment simultaneously with low inflation) was the crux of the debate between the supply-siders and the New Keynesians, with the supply-siders insisting it signaled a complete paradigm shift to a new type of economics in the developed countries, and the Keynesians insisting it was a temporary bump in productivity due to the rapidly decreasing cost of computing components and of doing business via the internet. Since we've had multiple recessions since 2000, doesn't that pretty definitively prove the New Keynesians correct? There was the recession that started in March 2001, and the "Great Recession" of 2008. I'm not an expert in economics by any means, but I thought that the business cycle as a permanent feature of capitalism did not fit within the explanatory framework of supply-side economics.
Furthermore, wasn't the stagflation of the Carter era due to oil shocks? The reason that poor growth and inflation coincided is because it was cost-push, and not demand-pull, inflation--not because the Keynesian model had suddenly became defunct.
So, I wonder if supply-side theory is still alive and kicking in academic circles, or if it just remains understandably popular, for political reasons, among the Republicans (the party of those who have made out like bandits under supply-side policies) and right-wing commentators.
I think your last paragraph has the explanation. Economics is supposed to be independent of everything else in society (according to economists) but the correlation between supply-side and Republicans has always been awfully strong.
Jimmyjazz asks, "I don't understand why supply-side theory is still alive."
It's alive and kicking because not only does the very top 2% or so want it to be, but because the next 20% or so want it to be - those who make six figure incomes. The doctors, lawyers, college presidents, etc. These people, while not ultra wealthy make enough and have enough that they perennially vote the cut taxes bit.
Then we have all the regular workers who are employed by the corporate media or other businesses or entities which have a vested interest in keeping this alive. So to keep a steady paycheck these regular workers are actually promoting this b.s. by their regular jobs.
Jimmyjazz asks, "I don't understand why supply-side theory is still alive."
-------------------
Please correct me if I'm wrong.
The last time supply-side economics was ousted, locked-up, and “put in jail” was in 1932 with the election of FDR during the Great Depression. It was “free-market”/supply-side/deregulation economics that lead us into that depression.
FDR reversed U.S. economic policy toward a regulated “mixed” market economy.
Also, at that time, political/economic socialism was expanding globally and presenting a severe challenge to capitalism, in general.
So, FDR realized that:
1) Regulation was needed to prevent the same “free-market”/supply-side problems from happening again, and,
2) Capitalism needed more compassion and justice for labor to restrain the advancement of socialism in the U.S.
Today, “free-market”/supply-side/deregulation economics does not have the institutionalized challenge from socialism that was present in 1932. Look at China, Russia, and India. “Free-market”/supply-side/deregulation economics is sitting in a GLOBAL MONOPOLY position today.
This might be why the banks chuckled when the system seized up in 2008 and demanded to be reimbursed for the massive losses they both incurred and caused, OR ELSE!
There should have been GOVERNMENTAL AUDIT AND REVIEW, COMPLETE ACCOUNTABILITY, NECESSARY SYSTEMIC ADJUSTMENTS MADE, AND CRIMINALS PUT IN JAIL.
There is no offsetting challenge to this free-market monopoly power today, YET.
I strongly recommend the book Nothing to Fear by Adam Cohen.
Its astounding how Reagan pulled up a failed theory. Then again, he was given his marching orders by the Hoover Institute. The Rich have hated SS and Medicare since year one. Too bad Reagan's LP screed on Medicare wasn't played in the 1980 election. But he was running against Carter.
Its just the dumbing down of America. The only thing people know of economics is supply and demand. They don't know what the free market actually is, they don't get how trickle down pushed capital to the rich, and they invested it overseas, not in the US. The Financial Times pointed that out, wasn't US journalism. Look at how unions are being busted up. Zero knowledge of labor history. We just have junk theory from Ayn Rand, a crank from the 50s, Libertatians a group you never heard of after you graduated college. And lately the Austrian School, another group of cranks. Then again look at the GOP.
Reagan's policies are the creation of someone, Reagan, with an incapacitated mind, Alzheimer's and Ayn Rand's philosophy is concocted by Rand while an amphetamine addict. These policies form the basis of the Repubican Party. These policies have resulted in a dysfunctional society and USG. These results are consistent with those who, Reagan/Rand, created them, someone with an incapacitated mind and a drug addict, who wrote some of the worst books ever written. A country guided with these policies cannot continue and that which cannot continue, won't. This cannot/ will not end well for the USA.
Indeed, the Great Depression should stand as an irrefutable reminder of the failure of supply-side idiocy. For, during the Depression, America had enormously rich natural resources, together with millions of able-bodied people desperate to work for the basic necessities of life which they desperately lacked. In a system that uses its resources maximally for the benefit of the whole, those people would be working on the rich natural resources to create the necessities they lacked. But, alas, the few superrich, who controlled the resources, did not feel that was a profitable way to invest their wealth. Of course, the Morgans, Carnegies, Rockefellers, etc. had immense wealth, but they were NOT using it to create jobs. Like corporations today, which are awash in an ocean of record profits.
Conservative nitwits maintain that when the rich use their money (by speculating in the stock market on which currency will rise today, or buying gold or real estate or yachts), it will lubricate and stimulate the economy, which helps the society as a whole. But if the democratic government uses that same money (through higher taxes) to employ people in making things that the masses can actually use, like roads or clothes or whatever, it will somehow not lubricate and stimulate the economy and help society as a whole. In the view of the conservatives, it only helps the economy as a whole when the rich use money to buy luxuries for themselves, and not when the government spends the same money on other projects.
The oil shocks didn't help but I think stagflation had more to do with paying off the debt incurred in Vietnam. The easyest way for a government to pay off a big debt (measured in a fixed amount of that nation's currency) is to print money thereby lowering the value of that money (inflation) After a few years of double digit inflation a million bucks is only worth half a million. and those government bonds are worth less, even with interest than when purchased.
I won't claim that I know for sure, but I seriously doubt that the U.S. paid off it's war debt after Vietnam by printing money. That is an incredibly irresponsible way to pay for debt, and the U.S. would not have its current status of the ultimate safe haven economy for international investors if it did that kind of thing. The reason why our central bank (the Fed) is politically independent of the fiscal authority (federal gov't) is precisely to make a monetization of government debt impossible.
The typical way that the Fed increases the money supply is not by printing money but by lowering interest rates. However, typically, lower interest rates-->more borrowing-->more capital investment-->more growth. Thus, growth and inflation typically coincide (both being the result of low interest rates), which means that stagflation (inflation without growth) is a weird anomaly. That is the Keynsian idea anyway.
This nonsense is still alive because the rich are passionately attached to the theory, and they can always find an army of paid academic bootlicks to argue their case for them.
basically, yep.
the supply side economy is only as good as the demand side - the demand side is only as good as the value of labor - the value of labor is only as good as the concerns for economy
The rich did do one kind of investment with all the money they saved in taxes -- they used it to move production overseas where labor was cheaper (which increases unemployment in the US and funnels consumer spending to end up in other countries).
A simple and easy to replicate refutation of supply-side nonsense that everyone can use.
A simple and easy to replicate refutation of supply-side nonsense that everyone can use.
The ‘moral of the story’ is that proponents of more tax cuts for the rich will have to simply continue to lie about it's effects as NONE in their choir will ever check. Nor would they believe the numbers if they crunched them for themselves.
Supply side has flat out failed so many times folks who invoke it's ugly name should be laughed off the stage, yet it not only continues but is the only game anyone seems to know.
Viva la stupid!
Phil Gramm skrewed this country. Funny how he's disappeared from the headlines. I was astounded his stupidity was passed as legislation at the time.
It's surprising to me to have heard very little about relative rates of job creation under SS economics vs. the records of Carter and Clinton. I may be wrong, but job creation seems to me the single best indicator of our nation’s economic health - the point at which the rubber of economic policies meets the highway of the broad middle class.
So the significance of the utter failure of Reaganomics to create sustained job growth cannot be underestimated, in sharp contrast to Democrats’ successes before and after Reagan/Bush I. Astoundingly, more jobs were created during Carter’s single term before Reagan than in the TOTAL of four of the five Republican terms since 1981 – and at a 70% top tax rate! And 15% more jobs were created in Clinton's eight years than in the TOTAL of twenty years of Republican low top tax economics since 1980. Twenty years of the Republican Supply Side experiment with the lowest tax rates since 1931 - 19.8 million jobs; twelve years of Democrats’ more equitable tax policies - 33 million jobs. 67% more jobs in 40% less time. And a very healthy eleven million jobs per term (2.7% annual increase) versus a paltry four million per term (1% annual increase) - a level which cannot support sustained economic growth without massive deficit spending . This, of course, is exactly what happened.
The facts, in millions of non-farm jobs created per four year term, and the average annual percentage increase:
Carter - '77-81 +10.3 million (+3.1%)
Reagan I - '81-'85 +5.3 " (+1.5%)
Reagan II - '85-'89 +10.8 " (+2.7%)
GHW Bush- '89-'93 +2.6 " (+0.6%)
Clinton I - '93-'97 +11.5 " (+2.6%)
Clinton II - '97-'01 +11.2 " (+2.3%)
GW Bush I '01-'05 0.0 " (0.0%)
GW Bush II '05-'09 +1.1 " (0.2%)
Obama '09-'10 -3.0 " (-1.1%)
Ref: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jobs_created_during_U.S._presidential_terms
Hillary was right. Just listen to talk radio as you drive through rural America. Its all Rush , Beck and other associated racists pushing the tax cut mantra will create jobs. Its a vast right wing conspiracy, and the Supreme Court did nothing to rein it in. There is a huge disconnect between rural America and the cities. They get out of HS and stay in town. No college, no economics, no sense that you can do better. Lots of repetitive Reagan was a Saint. Eventually they buy into it and its all Democrats tax and spend, ignoring how the GOP ships Main Street Capital to Wall Street and the banks.
Tax rates for the rich (primarly) were cut by Reagan and never substantially reversed in the 30 years since. The result, as compared to the preceeding 30 years: GDP has grown at a slower rate, real wages for the vast majority of Americans have stagnated while working hours have increased and benefits have declined, while inequality in wealth has exploded and is now at record levels that would have made the old-time Robber-barons envious.
Maybe the trickle-down is only supposed to occur after several millennia?
Maybe it has occurred, and all the facts that suggest (or rather prove) otherwise are a hallucination?
I am trying to anticipate conservatives' next argument.