Mitt Romney's wet noodle economics
He tries to make a case for simultaneous tax cuts and budget balancing, but it's impossible
This post originally appeared on Robert Reich's blog
Mitt Romney is smart enough not to join Newt Gingrich and Sarah Palin in using the proposed mosque at ground zero to to launch a presidential bid. While Gingrich is busy comparing Muslims to Nazis (“Nazis don’t have the right to put up a sign next to the holocaust museum in Washington”), and Palin is calling on New Yorkers to “refudiate” the plan (she subsequently corrected her word choice), Romney is offering an economic plan.
That’s a wise choice. Mitt knows Americans don’t care about mosques in Manhattan. They care about money in their own mitts.
Romney is intent on selling himself to America as the businessman who can turn the country around (sad to say, unemployment is likely to remain high all the way through November, 2012). Unlike Palin and Gingrich, Romney did, after all, run a business (yes, it was a firm that bought and sold companies and laid off lots of people along the way but, hey, that’s business.)
So we should take Romney’s economics seriously. In today’s (Wednesday’s) Boston Globe op-ed Romney attacks Obama’s economic policies for being ineffective and calls for what he calls a “growth and jobs” agenda. Here are the main points:
– match U.S. corporate taxes with those of other developed economies,
– preserve the Bush tax cuts for everyone, “especially small business,”
– allow businesses to write off capital investments made in 2010 and 2011 rather than over time,
– eliminate taxes on investment dividends,
– eliminate taxes on capital gains and interest for households earning less than $250,000 a year, and
– balance the federal budget.
Apart from the impossibility of simultaneously cutting taxes and balancing the budget without taking a meat cleaver to Social Security, Medicare, and defense spending (Romney delicately sidesteps this conundrum by urging we “reshape government programs” and “restructure entitlements”), his policies raise a more fundamental problem.
Call it the wet-noodle problem.
For Romney, the key to America’s recovery is to cut taxes on businesses and on people who invest in them. These steps, he says, are the “conditions that enable businesses of all sizes to grow and thrive.” In other words, if businesse get more capital at less cost, they’ll create jobs.
more:
http://www.salon.com/news/mitt_romney/index.html?story=/opinion/feature/2010/08/18/robert_reich_mitt_romney_wet_noodle_economics