OPINION Page 4 Amagic show -Saturday, April 11, 1981. The Michigan Daily of Reagan economics Do you believe in magic? If so then you are probably enchanted with President Reagan's proposed personal income tax cut. The president says cutting personal income taxes $44 billion in fiscal year 1982 will lead to lower inflation, a balanced budget, and more jobs. It all happens because of a new magic potion: supply-side economics. Contrary to public perception, the magic of supply-side stimulation is not new. In the 1960s the Kennedy administration introduced income tax cuts, an investment tax credit, and liberalized depreciation deductions. The only thing new about supply-side economics is that its proponents are exaggerating its capabilities. FURTHERMORE, THERE IS nothing mysterious about this magic trick. Aggregate supply is the total amount of goods and services produced by the economy. Its sidekick, aggregate demand, is the amount of goods and services consumers desire. Supply-siders believe the tax cut will increase aggregate: supply more than aggregate demand and cure all our'economic ills. However, not everyone believes in magic. Critics say the tax cut will reduce investment and inhibit economic growth. They also claim the tax cut will do for inflation what caffeine will do for insomnia. . Administration officials believe the tax cut will stimulate investment because lower tax rates give people a greater incentive to save. However, this effect of the tax cut will be trivial. The recently released 1980 Economic Report of the President noted, "the personal savings rate responds very little to changes in rates of return or in the tax structure." The report calculated that a 10 percent tax cut would increase investment a mere 0.002 percent of gross national product. Even if President Reagan's optimistic $3.2 trillion GNP estimate is accurate, the increased savings will barely exceed $6 billion. FURTHERMORE, THE TAX cut will also reduce investment. The tax cut will add $44 billion to the deficit, which the administration predicts will total $45 billion if Congress passes the administration's economic program. To finance its deficit the administration says it will sell government bonds, rather than print more money. This will increase the bond sup- ply, decrease bond prices, and increase in- terest rates. When the government borrows money, less is available for private sector in- vestors. Higher interest rates reflect a reduc- tion in the amount of money available for in- vestment and result in less investment. The amount of investment lost depends on the amount of the tax cut invested. If taxpayers By Stewart Mandell invest all of the tax cut, the tax cut would not cause higher interest rates. If only a small per- cent is invested, the tax cut will cost the economy billions of investment dollars. THE ADMINISTRATION says that two- thirds of the tax cut will be invested. But, the administration has no proof to support this figure. In fact, during the past few years, Americans saved less than 6 percent of their income. The administration claims taxpayers will save more than eleven times that amount. Thus, the odds are very high that only a small portion of the tax cut will be invested. On balance then, the tax cut will probably cause investment to decline. This is shameful because the government could easily ensure that investment significan- tly increases by expanding the investment tax credit, reducing corporate tax rates, and run- ning a budget surplus. In fact, the most ef- ficient way to stimulate investment is to run budget surpluses. By running a surplus the government buys bonds, increases bond prices, and reduces interest rates. Lower interest rates will stimulate more investment. A RECENT STUDY by Larry Dildine, a Deputy Director in the Treasury Department, supports this conclusion. The study published in last September's National Tax Journal calculated that reducing capital taxes by 5 percent and running a $25 billion deficit reduces investment by two percent whereas running a $25 billion surplus and leaving taxes unchanged increases investment over 5 per- cent. The study demonstrates what few economists would deny: the most efficient way to increase investment is to run a surplus, not to reduce taxes. The administration also claims lower tax rates will increase aggregate supply by in- ducing people to work more. But economic studies show that not everyone works more because of higher real wages; some work less or the same as before. Prof. Walter Heller, former chairman of the President's Council of Economic Advisors says, "The bulk of eviden- ce suggests that total hours worked might rise by 1 to 2 percent in response to a 10 percent rise in after-tax pay." Nor will this increased labor supply significantly increase productivity, that is, the output per worker. Inexperienced secondary workers will comprise much of this increases labor supply. Their output per worker will be less than the national average and could per- petuate productivity stagnation. THE ECONOMIC REPORT of 'the President calculated the tax cut's cumulative effect will be to increase aggregate supply 20 percent to 60 percent of GNP, under optimisitc circumstan- ces. Unfortunately, the report also estimated that the tax cut will increase aggregate demand 2 percent of GNP. These numbers are consistent with a host of other studies which show that personal income tax reductions raise demand five to ten times more than they raise supply. When demand exceeds supply, the result is higher prices and more inflation. Economists critical of these personal tax cuts are not exclusively Democrats or liberals For example, Herbert Stein, President Nixon's chairman of the Council of Economic Advisors has criticized the supply-side magic show. Also the tax cut is inconsistent with the monetarist view espoused by neo-classical economists. Now, when spending cuts are politically feasible, the administration has a magnificent opportunity to increase investment. Too bad the administration prefers costly magic shows. The American public will be paying for this show for years to come. A a t b i a a a d M d b .,c Stewart Mandell is a 3rd-year student at the University's Law School. His criticism t of Laffer's theory of economics will appear on tomorrow's Opinion Page. I ,ii Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan Weasel Vol. XCI, No. 156 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Editorials represent a majority'opinion of the Daily's Editorial Board TEN Ot)T of CONTROL. I AE1Z SHOT... CI-Tr'STnIMF- NAND&JN THIN& NKrtONhL F-MBARW65MENT... BRN HAND IS r IcESP! f 7viT 5LOW THis Ti ME r Another chance to rally against the Reagan budget PE4ATS L- Y tRt-{ CAN T. TH$11. I-AN4P5 ON. -'4 -r IL.Ot1ONE Wr1M A WN. ~0 ~DON} HAE Ta it- Ttt4kT THE~P.L;LpEVICTIMT. AND t4ANI'60NS AE Tht WORST OFA . W-k 1r \RMRR by Robert Lence 7t f~iMK 9Bj i 1-4 T HREE OBSTINATE Senate Republicans Thursday stood firm by their insistence on an even more conservative economic plan, refused to approve the federal budget 1an eador- sed by the Reagan administration, and in doing so may well have slit their own conservative throats. In a surprise move, three fiercely conservative members of the Senate Budget Committee sided with Democratic senators in rejecting the austere budget proposed by the Reagan administration and cut further by Congressional Republicans. The dissenting Republicans hope to devise a budget with even deeper cuts in federal spending, and so joined Committee Iiemocrats, who are pushing for their own, more moderte budget ,plan, in shooting down the Reagan plan. The Reagan administration had hoped that the budget plan would clear Capitol Hill hurdles before congressmen and senators leave for home for Easter recess next week. Administration officials fear that the delay will give opponents of the plan time to regroup, lobby fiercely against the Reagan proposal, and succeed in forcing passage of a compromise package such as the more moderate Democratic plan. So, instead of buying time for the development of a more conservative plan, as the three staunch Republicans had hoped, Thursday's defeat, in Born- mittee will probably result in a loss of budget-slashing momentum. Democrats can use the delay to rally opposition to the harsh Reagan plan. Constituent groups will have the oppor-; tunity to meet with their represen- tatives and senators during the recess in attempts to persuade them to reject the Republican plan in favor of a Democratic package which proposes more modest cuts in the federal budget. The delay also may help diffuse the current frenzied, slash-the-budget at- mosphere the administration has suc- ceeded in creating on Capitol Hill. When senators and congressmen return from their home districts after the recess, they will likely scrutinize the Republican budget proposals more carefully and approach decision- making with more prudence. Democrats must take advantage of this fluke of conservative political miscalculation and rally to push for more modest cuts when they return af- ter recess. LETTERS TO THE DAILY: More inane MSAyballot proposals To the Daily: Ah, the time has once again come and gone. MSA elections. And once again the same questions immediately come to mind. Maybe this year someone can help me with the answers. I do not deny that political awareness is a virtue. Heightened student involvement in and concern about student government would be ideal. But this can only be accomplished through a concerted, well organized, and continual effort on the part of our elected represen- tatives. If there are issues with genuinely widespread im- plications facing the University community, we as students should be informed of them well in advance of any real need to vote on a course of action. This information can be easily disseminated through student publications. When there are Clarifying the NDPC referendums upcoming on the ballot in a general election, the public is literally bombarded with summary and discussion on the issues. But subjecting students to the inanity of the MSA "Ballot Questions," with no prior ex- planation (or warning), only ser- ves to create frustration and con- fusion on the parts of students who either question the validity or necessity of some proposals, or wonder why their elected representatives are not qualified to decide such vital issues as "Should the words 'the Board of Directors of the Michigan Union' be deleted from the Appointmen- ts section of the All-Campus Con- stitution, which deals with the appointment of student represen- tatives to outside bodies, because the Board of Directors of the Michigan Union no longer exists?" This was the concern of Proposal A. I realize that constitutional amendments must follow a specified procedure, to ensure that neither our interests nor rights are violated. Can't we, though, find an easier way of passing at least the trivial ones? As for the four-point Proposal D, which poses the question of whether or not an Oxford House should be assigned "to each of the relevant area studies centers at the University of Michigan," and how this housing should be ad- ministered, I'd be willing to bet that many students would be very intertested to know just what an Oxford House is, what a "relevant area studies center" is, and what the implications of the passage of such a proposal would be. Unreasonable? And proposal E, which begins by asking the student to decide the future of United States foreign policy - I personally wouldn't go near this one with the proverbial ten-foot pole. I only hope that the incoming MSA administration will concen- trate on keeping students abreast of the important issues facing them; this communication through the ballot certainly isn't proving very fruitful. Let's not turn students off to an assembly that could be such a valuable tool. -Bill Kohn April 8 4 i4 I 11 radli1 mU 14 o" To the Daily: In the Daily's front-page story of April 4 about the National Democratic Policy Committee, the Daily made some factual errors, a few misleading statements, and omitted impor- tant details. Since Students Concerned About a Recurrence believes it is important that students and faculty be given the complete story about the organization, we would like to set the record straight. The National Democratic Policy Committee is a front- group for the extreme right-wing National Caucus of Labor Com- mittees whose political arm the U.S. Labor Party has run Lyndon LaRouche as its presidential candidate in 1976 and 1980. In fact, LaRouche is the undisputed head of all of these groups. The Daily article stated that SCAR "claims" ties exist bet- ween LaRouche and the NDPC. This fact appears in their publications, which lists him as chairman. The Daily wrote that SCAR feels that the NDPC is dangerous because they serve as a front group for other racist organizations. This is not totally correct. Though NCLC-USLP has connections with such right-wing, racist, and anti-Semitic groups as the Liberty Lobby, their front groups, (the NDPC, the Anti- Drug Coalition, and the Fusion legality of the signatures on their application. MSA is currently in possession of signed statements from two students stating that the NDPC used their names without authorization to do so. What the Daily characterized as a NDPC "demonstration" with signs "held high" was actually only two NDPC members (non- students) with a sign propped up" between their boxes of publications and bumper stickers. The Daily failed to men- tion that a group ranging at times from five to 15 students stood in opposition to the NDPC represen- tatives and told those who ap- proached, about their bigotry and bizarre conspiracy theories, and not to view them solely as a pro- nuclear group. We realized that just as they had the right to ex- press their opinions we had the right to express ours. In conclusion we would like to emphasize an important point which the Daily did make. This is the linkage between NDPC's economic and political theories and their "moral' stand. This linkage was well illustrated by their sign-"More engineers, less Queers." Students and others must be aware that when they support NCLC-USLP front-group they are supporting more than just a pro-nuclear or anti-drug group. They are supporting an entire political philosophy which Ak7. A 15 *p - na4 a -I Join Tax.D To the Daily: On April 15, Tax Day, we will join other war tax dissidents in a noontime protest at the Ann Ar- bor Federal Building against militarism and military expen- ditures. We have sent the Internal Revenue Service our check for only the non-military portion (68 percent) of the taxes we owe, along with a letter explaining our actions. Political and social science scholars agree that a nuclear war is likely within the next decade, and that a "limited" war would quickly escalate to a global nuclear exchange. Physicians call the medical effects of such a ayprotest tivating a nerve gas facility in Pine Bluff, Arkansas. Military expenditures are a: main cause of both inflation aftl: unemployment. Funds spent 'in the civilian sector on education and health produce more than. twice the number of jobs as the same funds spent in the military sector. As things are going, we may be ruined by our military, expenditures without even going to war. In its efforts to cut taxes,*" balance the federal budget, and: at the same time increase the* military budget, the present ad-* ministration is - making disastrous cuts in human ser- vices: public transportation 0- "- I /tp *w minw im