Thomas Sowell shows that during the Warren Harding administration, in 1921,
Secretary of the Treasury Andrew Mellon advocated tax rate cuts, which
were enacted into law by Congress. Afterward, there was rising output;
unemployment plummeted; and the resulting higher income produced greater
federal tax revenues, even though the tax rate had been lowered. There
were somewhat similar results in later years after high tax rates were cut
during the John F. Kennedy, Ronald Reagan and George W. Bush
administrations.
The facts about the 1920s tax rate cuts are unmistakably clear for
those who bother to check the facts. In 1921, when the tax rate on people
earning more than $100,000 a year was 73 percent, the federal government
collected a little more than $700 million in income taxes, of which 30
percent was paid by those earning more than $100,000. By 1929, after the
tax rate had been cut to 24 percent on incomes higher than $100,000, the
federal government collected more than $1 billion in income taxes, of
which 65 percent was collected from those with incomes higher than
$100,000.
In 1962, Democratic President John F. Kennedy pointed out that "it
is a paradoxical truth that tax rates are too high today and tax revenues
are too low and the soundest way to raise the revenues in the long run is
to cut the rates now." Both Presidents Ronald Reagan and George W. Bush
made similar arguments, and the tax rate cuts had the effect of
stimulating economic growth while increasing federal tax revenue and
shifting a greater percentage of the tax burden on to wealthier
individuals.
One very insightful part of Sowell's paper is the discussion about
what Mellon called the "gesture of taxing the rich" -- namely, tax-exempt
securities that he tried unsuccessfully to put an end to. Tax-exempt
securities and other tax breaks are valuable tools in the politics of
class warfare and envy. Politicians have it both ways. They get votes by
raising taxes on the wealthy -- or threatening to do so -- and at the same
time provide the wealthy with a way out of high taxes through tax-exempt
securities. This explains how President Obama can raise tens of millions
of dollars in campaign contributions from Hollywood millionaires and Wall
Street's rich and powerful. "Tax cuts for the rich" demagoguery is simply
the height of deceit perpetrated on the gullible people and useful idiots.
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