0 OPINION Page 4 Saturday, September 8, 1984 The Michigan Daily be dadtudensaUichigan I Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan Another not-so- funny joke 4 Vol. XVC; No. 3 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Editorials represent a majority opinion of the Daily's Editorial Board Not enuhsriht talk T IS TIME for President Reagan to start talking about taxes. Not about how he won't raise them if elected, but about how he will. There is little doubt that an increase will be necessary following the election. With the ominous deficit and no proposed cuts in spending, the Reagan administration should do the voters a favor by ex- plaining how such a lopsided budget can be balanced. But that's the problem: The ad- ministration is not interested in ex- plaining a bad word like "taxes" to the American puiblic. Economists and even key Republican members of Congress and the President's cabinet concede the inevitability of a tax in- crease. So how could President Reagan say last month that "we have no plans for, nor will I allow any plans for, a tax increase"? He was able to say that because he has no interest in exposing the tax question to the voters. On the same day, when Vice President George Bush said "any President would keep his options open" on taxes, Reagan's insincerity was made pain- fully obvious. While Reagan was spouting hollow rhetoric, the Vice President was talking common sense. A week later the President acknowledged that "A President of the United States should never say never" and set the pattern for his method of dealing with the tax issue. Reagan has offered nothing substantive to the deb- ate and remains content to say only what is politically popular. It is time for the tax issue to come out of the dark. How can Reagan con- tinue to assert that no taxes are necessary in view of the deficit and no proposed cuts in spending? And if they were raised, how would it be done? Would the burden be distributed to all income levels-would the poor benefit or the rich. The President hasn't paid a political price for taking such an irresponsible stand because he is saying precisely what the voters want to hear. Reagan likes to talk, but talk is cheap. He says he wants a balanced budget and voters like to hear that, but where are the concrete committments to such a goal? The President has bred an at- mosphere of dangerous optimism, dangerous because it is unfounded. The deficit stands in the way of long- term recovery and makes a mockery of the wish to balance the budget. "Taxes" should be greeted as a painfully necessary word, not ignored as a politically unpopular one. The debate should begin in earnest, and not behind Reagan's back. By Brian Leiter Has anyone noticed to what ex- tent the entire Reagan economic philosophy is based on a bad joke? The joke goes something like this: Voter: Hey, Ron, what's America's problem? Ron: Too much government. Voter: So what's the solution? Ron: More capitalism of cour- se. This exchange isn't particularly funny until one realizes that the perspective it reflects is com- pletely ass-backwards. It seems that Ronald Reagan missed out on two other key dialogues held notably in 1933 and 1964. What was the thrust of these dialogues? They went something like this: it is pretty clear that capitalism, left to its own devices, is a social and economic disaster-it impoverishes anywhere from 25 to 30 percent of the population; it annually throws into unemployment as much as 30 percent of the work- force; it generates gross material inequalities (currently 1 percent of the population owns 26 percent of the non-farm wealth, and that's a dramatic im- provement over the pre-New Deal days!); and it systematically excludes large segments, of the population from the basic necessities like food, housing, and medical care. If we are to preserve any sort of stable social fabric (and even the capitalists want that), the gover- nment is going to have to take steps to counteract the normal route of a free-market economy. In short, capitalism is the problem and government is the solution. THUS ONE CAN either laugh or cry when Ronald Reagan comes along and announces that if we just give the capitalists a few more tax breaks and a freer hand, the poor will move out of poverty, the unskilled will be trained, the unhealthy will get medical care, and the hungry will be fed. In fact, the whole reason the government programs Reagan assails came into existence was because historically the free-market never affected any of these things. But the worst joke of all is about to be played on voters un- der the guise of the "Reagan economic recovery." What does economic recovery consist of: First, there is low inflation. Of course, only the most diehard Reagan propagandists would claim that the low inflation is not attributable primarily to three factors: the recession, a good crop in 1983, and a world oil glut which stabilized oil prices. Of the three, only the recession might fairly be attributed to Reaganomics. What of the recent decline in unemployment? Yes, it is there. Yet that decline coincided neatly with two other phenomena: first, a sharp decrease in the number of people entering the job market in the 1980s (about 20 percent fewer people by 1985 than in 1975); and second, a decrease in 1983 average unit labor costs (the first decline since 1965). If people are getting paid less, it should be no surprise that more are working. Unemployment, by the way, is still higher than when Carter left office. WHAT OF THE great Reagan tax breaks for the private sector? They too, fall short of their promise. After Reagan's tax sub- sidy for corporations and the rich, there was no increase in productive investments. (Of course, anyone who witnessed the 30 percent reduction in corporate tax rates during the 1970s and the corresponding decline in invest- ments would have expected no more from the Reagan proposal.) Whatever upswing in investmen- ts there has been more recently was achieved through tried and true Keynesian methods: gover- nment fueling of the economy. When the government overspen- ds by 200 billion dollars a year-as Reagan has done-it would be a great surprise if the economy were not stimulated! Even if anyone is "recovering," it would be a good idea to ask "who?" It is certainly not the 35 to 40 million im- poverished (the highest number since the early 1960s); and cer- tainly not the eight million familied who in the past five years have fallen out of the mid- dle class (incomes from $17,000 to $41,000); nor are blacks who, ac- cording to a National Urban League report released earlier this year, are actually worse off v economically; nor are the millions of hungry and malnourished-despite Ed Meese's words of en- couragement. "But what of the liberal record?" Reaganites retort. "Certainly no one would have bought Reagan's line if liberalism had worked." Of cour- se, there is some truth to that: if the New Deal and Great Society had really delivered on all their promises, Reagan's attack would have been written off as groun- dless. The strange thing is that when we look at the extent of government activities in oft- hailed competitors like West4 Germany and Japan, we can only conclude that even the liberal agenda is shockingly conser- vative by contemporary global standards. In short: perhaps our problem is still too much capitalism. If Ronald Reagan were. an honest man, his 1980 dialogue would have gone like this : Voter: Hey, Ron, what' America's problem? Ron: Government has been making it too tough for rich white folks to make money. Voter: So what's the solution? Ron: We'll just have to pretend that it's good for everybody when rich folks make money. Of course, honesty like that doesn't win elections. But, strangelyenough, bad jokes do. 1 Leiter is a graduate student in law and philosophy. Doomed from the start OME ON, lighten up everyone. The new CRISP location isn't that bad. It may have been a bit frightening on Thursday when the line of drop/adders filled the hall and then stretched back to the fishbowl, but rest assured that things are getting better already. In fact, it probably won't be that crowded again until at least December when it comes time to register for the winter term. So relax. The new location in Angell Hall is centrally located but it seems unfor- tunate that it was chosen over some of the more attractive locations on cam- pus. The eighth floor of Burton Memorial Tower has at least as much room, and there you could listen to the carillon playing over all of the noise. Or what about the dental school? In- stead of disturbing classes in Angell Hall, the waiting throngs could offer their mouths to dental students and get a checkup in the process. The truth of the matter is that, regardless of location, CRISP will always be an ordeal. The University could move registration to the Alaskan tundra and the line would be 200 yards long and the courses you wanted would still be closed. It is the University student's fate to stand in line at least twice a year. It's probably best to just grin and bear it. The small business recovery By John Critchett As the November election ap- proaches, we will be constantly reminded of the economic recovery. Much of the real recovery has been felt by the nation's small businesses. In 1983, 600,000 small businesses were started. During that year, small business income grew 18 percent while wage and salary income grew just 6 percent. This is good news for por- prietors and partners. but why should the wage earning em- ployees care? There are several reasons. First, and most impor- tant, is the number of jobs gained. Between 1980 and 1982, small businesses produced a net gain of 2,650,000 jobs. During the same period, larger businesses produced a net loss of 1,665,000 jobs. Simply put, it is small businesses, not steel mills, which are putting America back to work. THE GROWTH of small business formations also reaf- firms that there is still a niche for the kind of simple competition which the free-market theorists so admire. This is an age when your favorite movie could be made by the same company that sells you soft drinks (guess which company that would be). It is nice to know that you might still recognize the owner of your neighborhood grocery store. So how can we encourage else. They will usually be content to earn 50 cents rather than a dollar. It is worth 50 cents in or- der to avoid being told what to do. But why only 600,000 new businesses? While that is a huge jump from the 1973 figure of 329,000, it still represents only one new business for every three hundred Americans. One reason is risk aversion.. Individuals as well as corporations tend to avoid risk and to pool it whenever possible. A new business is a risky undertaking and en- trepreneurs can't count on a steady income. Ironically, however, the recession of '81 to '82 may have reduced the relative risk of starting a new business. When companies scaled down their operations, many middle managers found that their cor- porations didn't offer them any income. ANOTHER FACTOR which limits entrepreneurial activity is a genuine lack of imagination. Most people acquire some formal education where they have teachers who tell them what to study, and then they go to work where they have bosses who tell them what to do. In the process, no one encourages them to develop their creative abilities. It should come as no surprise that many of the country's most suc- BLOOM COUNTY cessful entrepreneurs were high school drop-outs who quit their jobs. One test of whether a person is fully using his creative abilities is to ask him what he does in his spare time. If it's opening a can of beer and watching Howard Cosell, the person is not likely to be a budding entrepreneur. Ask yourself what you would do if you had to spend next weekend all by yourself. How long would it be before you turned on the T.V. set? Almost any activity can be created if it requires thinking. When was the last time you wrote a letter? You probably have a huge telephone bill, because you know that it requires less thought to call than to write. Another hindrance to the for- mation of small business is protective and discriminatory policy of government. Federal and state usury laws, for instan- ce, are insupportable on economic grounds. If a person is certain that he can turn $1 into $2, then he should be willing to pay up to 100 percent interest to borrow a dollar. But such a loan is considered "usurious" and would be voidable by the debtor. Paradoxically, corporations are not subject to usury laws. This is one reason why big banks lend billions of dollars to third world countries, but not to the corner grocery store. It is anybody'. guess how much interest the third world countries are promising to pay on the loans. The best way to compensate for risk aversion is to offer higher interest. The most important point about small busnesses may not be receiving much press. It is that the qualities needed by a suc- cessful entrepreneur, ideas and raw talent, are racially, and culturally neutral. A true en- trepreneur is his own boss, and, by definition, you can't discriminate against yourself. This is not to say, however, that 4 there is not discrimination in len- ding behavior. Creative in- dividuals of all backgrounds should wake up to the possibility that they could be successful en- trepreneurs. Government should realize that if a person is smart enough to have an idea for a new business, he should be smart enough to write his own lending contract and agree to pay whatever interest the parties to the contract deem appropriate. Critchett is a graduate student in business ad- ministration. by Berke Breathed Ml. P IM f lAb FA5PECK IN fl1E MILD... 7M I -w i I -