海角大神

Tax cut smackdown: Obama vs. Boehner (and Orszag)

President Obama and House Minority Leader John Boehner both want to extend tax cuts for the middle class, but have squared off over cuts for the wealthy.

|
Charles Dharapak / AP / File
House Minority Leader John Boehner of Ohio looks on as President Obama greets lawmakers at the Fiscal Responsibility Summit at the White House in February, 2009. Rep. Boehner and Mr. Obama are now facing off over the fate of the Bush tax cuts.

The outlines of the Great Tax Debate of 2010 are coming clear. Yesterday, President Obama on permanently extending the 2001-2003 tax cuts for those making less than $200,000 while allowing those aimed at the highest earners to expire at the end of the year. By contrast, House Republican leader John Boehner (R-OH) he wants Congress to temporarily extend the Bush-era tax cuts for everyone. Boehner took his cues from an in Tuesday鈥檚 New York Times by Peter Orszag, Obama鈥檚 former budget director, which included a similar proposal for the next two years.

Who has the better argument? I disagree with all three of them, but if I had to choose, I鈥檇 go for the Boehner/Orszag short-term solution. Before I explain why, it may be helpful to clarify a few issues.

First, while fun, this argument is not all that important. A 鈥榩ermanent鈥 tax cut is a fiction. No tax cuts are forever. Congress amends the Internal Revenue Code annually, and sometimes more than once a year. Since World War II, it has done a major overhaul about once a decade, and is overdue for its next renovation. And given massive budget pressures, one is likely to come sooner rather than later.And when it does, the entire Code will be in the mix, notwithstanding what it permanent and what is not.

At the same time, our recent experience with four dozen allegedly time-limited tax cuts that Congress extends more or less routinely each year suggests the word 鈥渢emporary鈥 does not carry the same meaning in Washington as it does elsewhere.

However, there are reasons why this debate does matter, at least inside the Beltway. To start, there is the matter of budget accounting. By offering a two-year extension of the , Boehner can make the 10-year cost of continuing the tax cuts for high earners look like a relatively modest $75 billion, far less than the than the $700 billion, 10-year price tag of a permanent extension. By contrast, making tax cuts permanent only for those making less than $200,000 forces Congress to build the $3 trillion, 10-year cost of Obama's plan into future budget baselines, while keeping tax cuts for high-earners out. The result: If the GOP does take control of Congress, it will have to scramble to find the money to pay for restoring tax reductions for those in the top brackets, or explain why it is "busting the budget" to do so.

Btw, it is important to note that while both Boehner and Orszag would both extend all the tax cuts for a couple of years, their long-run proposals differ profoundly. Orszag would let all the Bush-era tax cuts die after 2012. Boehner, by contrast, would not.

But my biggest objection to the Obama plan is that is manipulates expectations. It implies that the nation can solve its budget problems by simply raising taxes on the wealthy. But this is not possible. As a recent Tax Policy Center showed, even trying to do so would result in top rates approaching 80 percent. One day, a president and Congress will have to agree on a deficit reduction package that raises taxes across the board and cuts spending. That鈥檚 when those allegedly permanent tax cuts will disappear. Pretending otherwise is irresponsible.

As I鈥檝e written , I wish Obama and Congress could agree on a brief extension of only those tax cuts that are most likely to boost the short-term economy. But if that isn鈥檛 going to happen and we are forced to choose between the Obama solution and the Boehner/Orszag package, I鈥檒l reluctantly take a temporary extension for all.

------------------------------

海角大神 has assembled a diverse group of the best economy-related bloggers out there. Our guest bloggers are not employed or directed by the Monitor and the views expressed are the bloggers' own, as is responsibility for the content of their blogs. To contact us about a blogger, click here. To add or view a comment on a guest blog, please go to the blogger's own site by clicking on the link above.

You've read  of  free articles. Subscribe to continue.
QR Code to Tax cut smackdown: Obama vs. Boehner (and Orszag)
Read this article in
/Business/Tax-VOX/2010/0910/Tax-cut-smackdown-Obama-vs.-Boehner-and-Orszag
QR Code to Subscription page
Start your subscription today
/subscribe