The Michigan Daily-Saturday, July 26, 1980-Page 9 Noted GOP economist calls tax cut an unwise move From AP and UPI WASHINGTON - Herbert Stein, who was chief economic adviser to the Nixon administration, broke with the Republican platform yesterday and said it would be unwise to approve a tax cut now. "Tax reduction at this stage is likely to confirm the common impression that the government will not stick with its anti-inflation effort long enough to suc- ceed," Stein told the Senate Finance Committee. "THE RESULT would be to set the stage for another wave of inflation," he said. Stein's arguments were supported by Irving Shapiro, chairman of Du Pont Co., who testified before the House Ways and Means Committee. He said Congress should wait until after the election to decide on a tax cut. "A hastily improvised effort to cut taxes in the heat of an election year recession would result in reduced buying power for all Americans while promising the opposite," Shapiro said. "IT IS A cruel hoax to give citizens a tax cut without taking steps to tamp down inflation," he said. But two other business leaders asked the committee to write a tax cut now so it could go into effect next Jan. 1. Donald Regan, chairman of Merrill Lynch & Co. Inc., rejected arguments by the Carter administration that any such tax-cutting now would throw the federal budget even further out of balance and threaten gains already made against inflation. THE ECONOMY clearly can tolerate a tax cut near the bottom of a recession "if it is accompanied by a program of cutting federal spending," Regan said. Donald Seibert, chairman of J.C. 5 Penney Co. Inc., told the Ways and Means Committee: "No purpose is ser- ved by postponement of the inevitable necessity to at least partly offset the enormous implicit increase in tax bur- dens as the result of inflation since 1978 ... "Fundamental reasons for a major reduction in tax burdens will definitely not go away between now and next January." THE CARTER administration has taken no stand on whether a tax cut should be passed next year. But President Carter and his advisers insist any vote this year to reduce taxes in the future likely would set off a new round of inflation. The Republican platform calls for tax-cutting action this year, and GOP presidential nominee Ronald Reagan and his congressional supporters are pressing for immediate passage of a $36 billion tax cut to take effect next year. Stein, now associated with the University of Virginia, dismissed the Republicans' contention that a tax cut would generate so much more economic activity - and thus more taxes - that it would pay for itself. He also said national security might be threatened by a premature tax cut. The great danger, he said, is that Congress would be reluctant to expand the federal deficit or to make up for the revenue lost in a tax cut by reducing non-defense spending - and that defen- se spending would bear the brunt. Senate Finance chairman Russell Long (D-La.), said "at least half" of any tax cut should go to stimulate more savings, investment and productivity. Long said a tax propsal being developed by a Senate Democratic task force may be unveiled slightly later than originally planned, in very early September. No matches, lighters, or other open flame of any type. Fri Sat 12:00 (R)* Turn-out light in first week o registration z Continued from Page 3) vice Office in Washington, D.C. would have been ended by now," said WITH THE 'STAGGERED' high school graduate Joe Hatley, who registration system, 20-year-olds born will be a freshperson at the University in the first three months of the year in the fall. "I thought about not registered Monday, those born in the registering, but that $10,000 fine stop- second quarter signed up Tuesday, ped me." Hatley's card included a line those with third quarter birthdates reading, "I am registering under pro- registered Wednesday, and those born test.' in the last quarter of the year "I don't feel I have any choice," said registered Thursday. Yesterday and University physics major Mike Kuiper. today were set aside for those who did "I may someday try to get a job in not register earlier in the week. Sign up Europe, and if I go anywhere, they for males born in 1961 begins Monday, would probably look over my record to July 28. see whether I registered." Kuiper was Some of those registering today at the holding a "Registering under protest" Liberty St. post office were doing so un- sticker. der protest. "I was hoping registration N CONCERT AND BEYOND Fri Sat 12:00 (PG) TnsoC MiNrmse Use Daily Classifieds