Page 8-Tuesday, May 20, 1980-The Michigan Daily Carter advisors urge grant of tax cut as fix for recession WASHINGTON (AP) - President Carter will be told by his advisers that he must ease the tax burden on Americans by backing a tax cut of at least $30 billion in 1982, if not before, one government official says. Some of Carter's advisers voice frustration that the president remains opposed to a tax cut in 1981 to help cushion what they believe will bea wor- se recession than the administration is forecasting. "SOMETIMES IT bothers the economists that he's so strong about balancing the budget that he's not willing to listen to arguments other- wise," said the official who asked not to be identified. . Carter has repeatedly said he will not propose a tax cut until the federal budget is in balance, which means there could not be a tax cut this year and probably not in 1981 unless Congress acts on its own. But the official said economists and budget-planners at the Treasury Department, the Council of Economic Advisers and the Office of Management and Budget are agreed on the need for a tax cut in calendar year 1982 at the latest. "OMB, CEATreasury people will be saying, 'Look, we can't hold taxes for very much longer. The burden is rising so rapidly, you've got to look down the road,' " this official said. "We will be arguing, the staff, for an '82 tax cut, definitely in the next budget." The official said a tax cut should be equal to at least one per cent of the nation's gross national product, which he said would mean a reduction of "close to $30 billion." Privately, the advisers don't rule out the possibility that Carter could change his opposition to a 1981 tax cut if the recession is much worse than predic- ted. One official said the 1981 budget is too tight to allow for adequate relief if the recession is serious. One administration official said government receipts as a share of the nation's gross national product will rise to a record 22.5 per cent in 1981 and 23.1 per cent in 1982, unless taxes are reduced. Meanwhile, government figures released yesterday showed the income of Americans grew sluggishly last mon- th and factory usage fell as recessionary conditions continued to spread through the economy. The Commerce Department reported that personal income - which includes wages, rental income, stock dividends and interest minus Social Security payments - grew a scant 0.02 per cent last month to an annual $2.07 trillion. The $500 million increase from March was the poorest monthly performance since the last recession. AP Photo A MIAMI POLICEMAN, with his trained guard dog by his side, takes aim at looters during riots in the Florida city Sunday. A curfew was in effect Sunday night in parts of Miami as a result of the violence which left 19 persons dead and over 120 injured. Death toll continues to rise in Miami (Continued from Page 1 fatalities since Newark and Detroit ex- ploded in 1967's "long hot summer." More than 370 people have been in- jured and nearly 500 arrested in the strife triggered by acquittal in Tampa on Saturday of four white ex-policemen in the beating death of a black Miami man. Several fires were reported after the curfew lapsed at 6 a.m. yesterday, and looting and b9ttle throwing persisted, but police said physical violence I declined. Heavily armed' guardsmen and state and local officers roamed the city's trouble spots. BARS WERE closed and liquor sales prohibited throughout the area except in nearby Miami Beach, and service station attendants in the troubled neighborhoods were told to pump no gas except into vehicles. Firearms sales were curbed as well. Civiletti: Toxics 'nastiest' problem (Continued from Page 6) vironmental neglect," Civiletti said, "but it has issued too many regulations and made them too tough." The Attorney General stopped short of maintaining that the government has overregulated, stating instead that "we may have gone too fast in some areas and too slow in others ... None of us can abandon the environmental protection effort in the name of regulatory reform. We must have environmental laws ... and we must have stronger enfor- cement to protect the public." The 45-year-old Civiletti said these measures were part of the "earnest" effort by Congress in the 1970s-which he called "the environment decade"-to tackle the problem of ex- cessive environmental pollution. I 4 I 0