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Entitlement, Not Tax Cuts, Widen the Wealth Gap
Written By : Michael Barone

What should be done about income inequality? That basic question underlies the arguments hashed out in the supercommittee and promises to be a central issue in the presidential campaign.

Supercommittee Democrats argue that income inequality has been increasing and can be at least partially reversed by higher tax rates on high earners. They refused to agree on any deal that didn’t include such tax increases.

Supercommittee Republicans offered a plan to eliminate tax preferences and reduce tax rates, as in the 1986 bipartisan tax reform. They argued that high tax rates would squelch economic growth. They didn’t make the case that their proposals would also address income inequality. But House Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan, in a 17-page paper based largely on a Congressional Budget Office analysis of income trends between 1979 and 2007, has done so.

Ryan, a Republican from Wisconsin, makes the point that the government redistributes income not only through taxes but also through transfer payments, including Social Security, Medicare, food stamps and unemployment benefits. The CBO study helpfully measures income, adjusted for inflation, after taxes and after such transfer payments.

Many may find the results of the CBO study surprising. It turns out, Ryan reports, that federal income taxes (including the refundable Earned Income Tax Credit) actually decreased income inequality slightly between 1979 and 2007, while the federal payroll taxes that supposedly fund Social Security and Medicare slightly increased income inequality. That’s despite the fact that income tax rates are lower than in 1979 and payroll taxes higher.

Perhaps even more surprising, federal transfer payments have done much more to increase income inequality than federal taxes. That’s because, in Ryan’s words, “the distribution of government transfers has moved away from households in the lower part of the income scale. For instance, in 1979, households in the lowest income quintile received 54 percent of all transfer payments. In 2007, those households received just 36 percent of transfers.”

In effect, Social Security and Medicare have been transferring money from low-earning young people (who don’t pay income but are hit by the payroll tax) to increasingly affluent old people. The Democrats, perhaps following the polls and focus groups, have been protecting these entitlement programs that have done more to increase income inequality than the Reagan and Bush tax cuts put together.

Ryan makes three more points that may strike many as counterintuitive.

First, reductions in some transfer payments haven’t hurt the living standards of most low-earners. The prime example is the welfare reform act of 1996, which reduced transfers to single mothers but induced many of them to find jobs that left them better off economically and, probably, psychologically.

Second, Americans aren’t trapped in one segment of the income distribution. A Tax Journal analysis of individual income tax returns found that 58 percent of those in the lowest income quintile in 1996 had moved to a higher income segment by 2005. This comports with common experience. We move up and down the income scale in the course of a lifetime.

Finally, the inflation adjustment used in the CBO analysis was the Consumer Price Index. But that tends to overstate inflation (as any indexes tends to do, since it measures the cost of a static market basket of goods and services). A study by Chicago economist Christian Broda found that prices for goods purchased by low-earners have been rapidly decreasing, while prices for goods of high-earners have increased. Kids’ school clothes may be cheaper at Walmart than they were years ago, while prices at Neiman Marcus keep increasing.

So if the question is how to compensate for increasing income inequality, higher tax rates on high-earners won’t do much — and could be counterproductive if they diminish economic growth. A better way is suggested by the supercommittee Republicans: Limit future increases in transfer payments to affluent households, and cap deductions for home mortgage interest and state and local taxes, which are hugely lucrative for high-earners and worthless for low-earners who don’t pay income tax.

These proposals won’t reduce income inequality altogether. Much of the increased inequality comes from the huge increases for those in the top 1 percent of earners. But we wouldn’t be better off if Steve Jobs had never existed.

Keeping entitlements as they are and raising tax rates on high-earners is a recipe for Europe-style stagnation. Ryan and the supercommittee Republicans point toward a better way.

Michael Barone, senior political analyst for The Washington Examiner (www.washingtonexaminer.com), is a resident fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, a Fox News Channel contributor and a co-author of The Almanac of American Politics.

1
  • Anonymous

    We could stop propping up failing businesses just because they greased the right palms.

    I wouldn’t mind seeing some CEOs end up poor because they made horrible decisions, that’s how this system is supposed to work.  

    • http://www.facebook.com/JOshLucase Josh Lucas

      Unless you work for Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac, then you are entitled to bonuses.

  • Anonymous

    Stop the pork and bailouts and you’ll solve most of the problem. You can count the number of legitimately wealthy businesspeople in this country on two hands. Most of the rest have gotten their cash as executives at co-opted companies or through sweetheart contracts.

    Every dime of which, of course, comes out of the pockets of the dwindling middle class that’s just trying to get by doing an honest day’s work. Suckers.

  • http://www.wordaroundthenet.com Christopher Taylor

    Interestingly enough a British study shows that the push for multiculturalism and diversity actually increases wealth inequity.

    • Jfisher17

      The whole thing seems like a false premise. Instead of debating income inequality, Liberals should inform us why income should be equal in the first place. Is intelligence equal?

      • http://www.wordaroundthenet.com Christopher Taylor

        Sure, the critical thing is to have income mobility and economic opportunity; that way anyone can achieve as much as they are able and desire to.

        Still, its fun to confront the left with the failure of their schemes, resulting in exactly the opposite of what they desired.

      • http://www.facebook.com/JOshLucase Josh Lucas

        Inequality is the default. If you have to force equality, then you weren’t equal to begin with!

  • Anonymous

    Michael, take a course in economic history. Our wealth inequality began to rise in earnest with the tax-cutting Reagan administration, and zoomed up with the lowered tax rates he instituted and have continued for the next 30 years.

    • http://www.facebook.com/JOshLucase Josh Lucas

      If you like economic equality so much, go live in North Korea.

      • Toastrider

        I hear Cambodia got a good dose of economic equality a while back, too.

        • http://www.wordaroundthenet.com Christopher Taylor

          what he needs is a Holiday in Cambodia.

          • Anonymous

            Was that a Dead Kennedys reference?

          • http://www.wordaroundthenet.com Christopher Taylor

            Indeed, and the song has a stanza directly targeted at jackasses like Shergetc.

    • Anonymous

      Maybe it’s time you switched drug dealers, the crud you’ve been smoking has relly given you some serious brain damage.  Or is it just too much DU/KoS Kool-Aid?  Unemployment nosedived after Ronald Reagan’s policies went inbto effect.  That’s pure fact something you drooling moonbats ignore. 

      You lose.

      • Anonymous

        Or is it just too much DU/KoS Kool-Aid?

        The funny thing about Shergald (that is to say Joe shergald of Britton MI) is that he’s actually been BANNED from KoS.

        It’s pretty bad when you are so obnoxious that even your fellow leftists can’t stand you!

        • Anonymous

          Schizophrenic psychopath was the term of endearment KoS used to describe him, I believe…

          • Martin Hale

            Sim, some months ago when I was poking around the web looking at Shergald’s posting history I came across the following.  It’s an excerpt from an email from someone who was allegedly a “site administrator” at DK.  From his comments, I suspect that he might have been a moderator there:

            A word about ‘Shergald’, to set up the background here. Shergald is, short version, an
            unapologetic and pathological liar
            — towards friends and enemies alike —
            and has increasingly slid towards anti-Semitism.

            You can read the whole article at:

            http://globalvoicesonline.org/2007/05/23/arabeyes-whats-happening-at-the-daily-kos/

          • Anonymous

            Heh! Gotta love reading his fellow leftists recognizing the fact that he’s ‘batshit crazy.’

          • Anonymous

            Just goes to show you, even Moulitsas isn’t wrong about everything.

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