June 1, 2004
LAFFING ALL THE WAY TO A TWENTY YEAR BOOM:
The Laffer Curve: Past, Present, and Future (Arthur B. Laffer, 6/01/04, heritage.org)
The story of how the Laffer Curve got its name begins with a 1978 article by Jude Wanniski in The Public Interest entitled, "Taxes, Revenues, and the `Laffer Curve.'" As recounted by Wanniski (associate editor of The Wall Street Journal at the time), in December 1974, he had dinner with me (then professor at the University of Chicago), Donald Rumsfeld (Chief of Staff to President Gerald Ford), and Dick Cheney (Rumsfeld's deputy and my former classmate at Yale) at the Two Continents Restaurant at the Washington Hotel in Washington, D.C. While discussing President Ford's "WIN" (Whip Inflation Now) proposal for tax increases, I supposedly grabbed my napkin and a pen and sketched a curve on the napkin illustrating the trade-off between tax rates and tax revenues. Wanniski named the trade-off "The Laffer Curve."I personally do not remember the details of that evening, but Wanniski's version could well be true. I used the so-called Laffer Curve all the time in my classes and with anyone else who would listen to me to illustrate the trade-off between tax rates and tax revenues. My only question about Wanniski's version of the story is that the restaurant used cloth napkins and my mother had raised me not to desecrate nice things.
The Laffer Curve, by the way, was not invented by me. For example, Ibn Khaldun, a 14th century Muslim philosopher, wrote in his work The Muqaddimah: "It should be known that at the beginning of the dynasty, taxation yields a large revenue from small assessments. At the end of the dynasty, taxation yields a small revenue from large assessments."
A more recent version (of incredible clarity) was written by John Maynard Keynes:
When, on the contrary, I show, a little elaborately, as in the ensuing chapter, that to create wealth will increase the national income and that a large proportion of any increase in the national income will accrue to an Exchequer, amongst whose largest outgoings is the payment of incomes to those who are unemployed and whose receipts are a proportion of the incomes of those who are occupied...
Nor should the argument seem strange that taxation may be so high as to defeat its object, and that, given sufficient time to gather the fruits, a reduction of taxation will run a better chance than an increase of balancing the budget. For to take the opposite view today is to resemble a manufacturer who, running at a loss, decides to raise his price, and when his declining sales increase the loss, wrapping himself in the rectitude of plain arithmetic, decides that prudence requires him to raise the price still more--and who, when at last his account is balanced with nought on both sides, is still found righteously declaring that it would have been the act of a gambler to reduce the price when you were already making a loss.
The basic idea behind the relationship between tax rates and tax revenues is that changes in tax rates have two effects on revenues: the arithmetic effect and the economic effect. The arithmetic effect is simply that if tax rates are lowered, tax revenues (per dollar of tax base) will be lowered by the amount of the decrease in the rate. The reverse is true for an increase in tax rates. The economic effect, however, recognizes the positive impact that lower tax rates have on work, output, and employment--and thereby the tax base--by providing incentives to increase these activities. Raising tax rates has the opposite economic effect by penalizing participation in the taxed activities. The arithmetic effect always works in the opposite direction from the economic effect. Therefore, when the economic and the arithmetic effects of tax-rate changes are combined, the consequences of the change in tax rates on total tax revenues are no longer quite so obvious.
That much at least no one disagrees with. Didn't realize that Rumsfeld & Cheney were at the apocryphal scene. Posted by Orrin Judd at June 1, 2004 10:54 PM
Where some people go wrong is to assume a "Laffer" effect from lowering taxes from any rate or amount...
Which, if carried to its logical conclusion, would mean that lowering taxes to 0% would bring in the most revenue.
Posted by: Michael Herdegen at June 2, 2004 12:54 AMI disagree, and can cite numerous examples.
In most places at most times, the most beneficial reform of taxes would have been to get them to government.
Not so much a problem in the USA, but if you're going to generalize, you might as well fit the observations to experience.
As Orrin so often reminds us, the US economy gets bigger and bigger, while the tax burden does too.
How is that?
Posted by: Harry Eagar at June 2, 2004 1:50 AMHarry:
Yes, but your disagreement is a reflection of your disbelief in classical economics.
The tax burden, though too high is nowhere near the far end of the Laffer Curve and our tax burden is lower than other developed countries, going a long way to explaining our robust (though retarded) growth and their stagnation.
Posted by: oj at June 2, 2004 8:40 AMMichael:
No, the assumption is that you'd get nothing at 0% and at 100%.
Posted by: oj at June 2, 2004 9:25 AMA fairly simple truism, i.e. 0 at 0% and 0 at 100%, is just too difficult for some politicians to grasp. Could it be that personal interest in the accumulation of power colors their thinking? You bet!
Posted by: Tom Corcoran at June 2, 2004 9:32 AMI don't fault Bush so much for the tax cuts as for his administration's total disregard for reigning in spending. Tax cuts with no concommitant effort at spending cuts is a recipe for disaster.
Posted by: Robert Duquette at June 2, 2004 11:21 AMWhether classical economics works or not is not a function of whether I believe in it.
Classical economics cannot explain, eg, the Swiss watch business.
Posted by: Harry Eagar at June 2, 2004 2:22 PMoj:
Yes, you'd get nothing at 0%, but you might also get nothing more than usual if you lowered rates from 22% to 20%.
A further 2% advantage, from an already low rate, might not provide any incentive to work harder.
Thus, the Laffer effect is minimal, at best, when tax rates are under 40%-ish.
Posted by: Michael Herdegen at June 5, 2004 4:36 AMSo you'd have no objection to a 2% pay cut?
Posted by: oj at June 5, 2004 7:31 AM