In early 2016, When Larry Kudlow and I suggested that then-presidential candidate Donald Trump propose a 20% business tax rate for U.S. companies, down from the highest-in-the-world rate of 35%, he enthusiastically endorsed this “America First” policy — not because he loved corporate America, but because he realized that as long as small and large companies were paying the highest tax rates, jobs and factories would continue to move offshore.
We argued the most significant beneficiaries would be American workers who would have access to more jobs and higher wages.
The liberal economists we debated on this disparaged the tax reform as “tax cuts for big corporations and the rich.” Moreover, they predicted that it wouldn’t work.
In 2017, the tax cuts passed without a single Democratic vote. Now we would have a real-life scientific experiment on supply-side economics. Do lower tax rates generate more jobs and a better economy for all?
The issue isn’t just academic. The Biden people, the very same people who said the tax cuts wouldn’t work, now want to repeal the Trump tax reductions essentially.
But here is what happened: By the end of 2019 and right before the pandemic, the United States had arguably one of the most prosperous economies ever, especially for those at the bottom of the economic ladder and minorities. Not only did unemployment and poverty rates fall to near their lowest levels ever, but black and Hispanic people saw the most significant income gains.
I remember visiting Trump in the Oval Office and telling him that the tax cuts had worked better than any of us had predicted. He sat back and said in his usual grandiose fashion, “Not more than I predicted.” In hindsight, it seems clear that the tax cuts played a significant role in cushioning the blow from the pandemic and the business shutdowns.
But what about the “tax cuts for the rich” mantra from the Biden and Pelosi crowd? Was it right? No.
The Congressional Budget Office just reported that federal corporate income tax receipts were up 75% this year to a record $370 billion. That brought total federal revenue to over $4 trillion, over 18% of GDP for the first time in 20 years.
We also have learned that the share of taxes paid by the wealthiest 1%, people like Mark Zuckerberg, Bill Gates, LeBron James, and Warren Buffett, rose from 39% to almost 42% of the total. In other words, the rich paid more.
The irrefutable conclusion is that the scientific experiment in how to grow an economy worked. Big time. Yet those on the Left who are always lecturing us about “following the science” have opted to ignore the science. Who needs science when it conflicts with political ideology?
If ever there were a policy that lifted all boats, it was the Trump tax cuts. The Biden tax policies to “soak the rich” threaten to capsize the economy. And that will hurt the poor the most.
The question is: Do they even care?