4:02AM
Job of tax cuts is done

ARTICLE: Budget Office Forecasts Drop in U.S. Deficit, By EDMUND L. ANDREWS, New York Times, January 25, 2007
Fascinating, confirming what many have said all along: the tax cuts were a huge cause in deficit.
On other hand, you have to factor in counter that says cuts were great stimulus for economy.
So, if self-correcting in their budget impact, then job of cuts is done and they should be allowed to lapse and Bush gets credit for both ends.
Or... GOP gets stubborn, Dems get overly partisan, and this doesn't get done?
Just a thought...
Reader Comments (4)
If tax cuts have helped reduce the deficit, why not make them permanent?
Take a look at CBO projections for 2006 that were written in 2004 and they will bear little relation to the reality of tax collections as they happened. In fact, take any period a few years apart and you'll find busted projection after projection.
People trapped in the static mindset are constantly surprised by revenue coming in above their static projections after tax cuts and disappointed about "unforseen" revenue shortfalls after tax increases.
So we're 4 years out from our first "surplus" year of 2011. Anybody want to give me an example of a CBO projection that was remotely accurate 4 years out? I bet you'll have a lot harder time than I will finding ones that are very inaccurate.
The reason that dynamic analysis (DA) hasn't entirely supplanted it is that it is easy to "cheat" on dynamic analysis. DA depends (much like the real world) on what is going on in people's heads, how they will, in the aggregate, respond to changing incentives. Nobody is competent to judge that objectively so we rely on tools we know are wrong because they're the only ones we can agree on as objective numbers. Tom was falling for a fallacy. We shouldn't go along with that.