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  • When President Ronald Reagan began his first term in 1981,

  • the US economy was struggling.

  • Unemployment rates were high and getting higher,

  • and in 1979, inflation had peaked at an all-time high for peacetime.

  • In an effort to combat these issues,

  • Reagan's administration introduced a number of economic policies,

  • including tax cuts for large corporations and high-income earners.

  • The idea was that tax savings for the rich

  • would cause extra money to trickle down to everyone else,

  • and for that reason,

  • these policies are often referred to as trickle-down economics.

  • From the 80s to the late 90s,

  • the US saw one of its longest and strongest periods

  • of economic growth in history.

  • Median income rose, as did rates of job creation.

  • Since then, many politicians have invoked trickle-down theory

  • as a justification for tax cuts

  • but did these policies actually work,

  • either in the sense of stimulating economic growth,

  • or in terms of improving circumstances for Americans?

  • Would they work in other circumstances?

  • To answer these questions,

  • the main things to consider are whether the impact of the tax cut

  • on the government's tax revenue is harmful,

  • whether the money saved in taxes actually stimulates the economy,

  • and whether stimulating the economy actually improves people's lives.

  • The idea behind tax cuts is that if taxes are too high,

  • people will be less willing to work,

  • which would ultimately decrease tax revenue.

  • So at a lower tax rate, the government might actually gain more tax money

  • that it can theoretically put towards improving life for its citizens,

  • because people will work more when they get to keep more of their earnings.

  • Of course, there's a limit to how much the government can cut taxes:

  • at a zero tax rate there is no tax revenue regardless of how much people are working.

  • So while cuts from a very high tax rate might be fine,

  • cuts from a lower tax rate might be counterproductive,

  • hampering the government's ability to accomplish crucial things.

  • Tax rates were extremely high when Reagan took office.

  • His administration cut the highest income tax bracket from 70% to 28%

  • and corporation tax from 48% to 34%.

  • By comparison, as of early 2021,

  • those rates were 37% and 21% respectively.

  • When tax rates are lower, tax cuts for the wealthy can be harmful.

  • For example, in 2012 to 2013,

  • lawmakers cut the top tax-rate in the state of Kansas by almost 30%

  • and reduced some business tax rates to zero.

  • As a result, the government's balance sheet immediately fell

  • into negative territory and did not recover,

  • implying that wealthy individuals and companies did not invest

  • back into the economy.

  • In short, the money did not trickle down.

  • This appears to be a trend:

  • in a study over multiple periods of history and across 18 countries,

  • The London School of Economics found that cutting taxes

  • increased the wealth of the top 1% of people,

  • but had little effect on the economy as a whole.

  • In order for tax cuts for the rich to truly stimulate the economy,

  • they would have to spend the saved money

  • putting it back into, for example, local businesses

  • but this isn't what happens in practice.

  • No economic policy operates in isolation:

  • each time and place is unique with multiple policies in place simultaneously,

  • so there is only ever one test case for each set of scenarios.

  • This makes it difficult to deliver definitive rulings on whether

  • an economic policy worked,

  • whether something else might have worked better,

  • or whether it would work in a different situation.

  • And yet, rhetoric around trickle-down economics,

  • both during the Reagan era and since,

  • often promises something definitive:

  • that spending by society's richest members on things other than taxes

  • directly improves the financial circumstances of the less wealthy.

  • And there's not much evidence to support that.

When President Ronald Reagan began his first term in 1981,

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Does trickle-down economics actually work? - Jonathan Smith

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    shuting1215 に公開 2022 年 05 月 15 日
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