In Biden World, All Economic Common Sense Is Gone

Liberals and conservatives, Keynesians and supply-siders used to share the view that if you’re in a recession, you don’t raise taxes. No more.

AP/Susan Walsh
President Biden speaks about the economy during a meeting with CEOs at the White House complex July 28, 2022. AP/Susan Walsh

If you’re in a recession, it makes no sense at all to be raising taxes. That used to be a common sense point of view, shared by liberals and conservatives, Keynesians and supply-siders. No more.

In our topsy-turvy Biden world, where true is false, false is always false, recessions don’t exist, inflations don’t exist, fossil fuels don’t exist, and 75 percent of America doesn’t exist, there is no common sense left. So let me try: In a recession, you don’t raise taxes.

To quote an eminent economist, Larry Lindsey, “there have never been two consecutive quarters of negative growth that were not ultimately deemed as recessionary.”

My corollary is: In a period of high inflation, you don’t spend your keister off.

So, in the last few days, Congress, led by Democrats but sometimes assisted by Republicans, has in its wisdom committed to spending just south of $600 billion in Senator Schumer’s reconciliation bill and another $280 billion in the CHIPS+ corporate welfare, industrial planning, pork-barrel boondoggle bill. So, in round numbers, a little less than $900 billion.

In Friday’s personal income report, all the inflation news was higher than expected.

The PCE deflator was up 1 percent in June, following only 0.6 percent and 0.2 percent in the prior two months, with the three-month change 7.2 percent at an annual rate. Contrary to Wall Street wisdom, we’ve had two consecutive quarters of declining GDP, but inflation is going up anyway.

On taxes, you’re looking at a $740 billion tax hike, including a damaging 15 percent alternative minimum tax on corporations, whose taxable income is lower than book profits. These corporations are not evil. They did not break the law. Instead, they are using legal tax credits and deductions, but especially 100 percent immediate investment expensing, which increases productivity, real wages, and typical family incomes. This 15 percent minimum tax will prevent them from making these crucial job-creating and technology-enhancing business investments.

Ironically, Senator Manchin’s coal industry will be hard hit by this. So will all mining, minerals, fossils, manufacturing, and even financial services. This turns dumb into dumber. 

Guess what? Green energy tax credits would be exempt from the new corporate AMT. Now isn’t that just a kick in the pants?

So you could argue, and I will, that all the “Green New Deal” obsessive climate-change spending and the so-called CHIPS+ add-on will boost inflation, while the tax hikes will sink recession deeper. 

By the way, these tax hikes are still not enough to cover all the spending — so there is no “deficit reduction” in this fiscal boondoggle. To put it mildly, this is not good. Far better for the Congress to do nothing and go home early. In fact, that’s kind of the story of the Biden administration.

It came into office amid a strong economy, with about 6 percent growth and less than 2 percent inflation. The administration should have done nothing. By the way, anyone can see that President Biden would have rather stayed in his basement and done nothing.

But no, they had to be activists. Green activists. High-tax activists. Big-spending activists. Union activists. Fossil fuel-hating activists. Tax successful people activists. Open borders activists. Police-hating activists. “I left Afghanistan too soon” activists. “I was a dollar short and a day late in Ukraine” activists.

All this radical, woke, modern monetary theory climate activism has in a short 18 months sunk the economy, generated catastrophe at the borders, disrupted our culture, supported criminals — not victims — and so forth and so on.

I don’t like activism. Never have. Years back, when I worked for Reagan, the CEA chairman, Murray Weidenbaum, used to say to the Cabinet: “Don’t just stand there, undo something.” I love that. There’s a reason conservatives favor limited government.

In fact, that’s a pretty good litmus test for congressional votes: If it limits government, vote for it. If government is expanded, vote against it.

The whole problem with the Bidens is they’ve tried to govern as big-government, central-planning, regulatory overkill activists, and it’s temporarily taken a great country down. 

So, we have a lot of work in front of us. We need to make America great again, again.

From Mr. Kudlow’s broadcast on Fox Business News.


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