TruPolitics Podcast Episode 23: The Debt Ceiling Battle

The 23rd TruPolitics Podcast. Episode 23 covers the debt ceiling battle from many viewpoints, including how we got here, the merits of each plan being offered, and where to go next. To listen to the best version of the podcast, go to iTunes, search “TruPolitics,” and hit “Subscribe.”

TruPolitics Podcast 23: The Debt Ceiling Battle

TruPolitics Podcast Episode 22: Debt Ceiling Debate; Liberal vs. Conservative Economic Thinking; and The Lesson of Greece

The 22nd TruPolitics Podcast. Episode 22 covers the debt ceiling debate; liberal versus conservative economic thinking; and the lessons of Greece for the United States. To listen to the best version of the podcast, go to iTunes, search “TruPolitics,” and hit “Subscribe.”

TruPolitics Podcast 22: Debt Ceiling Debate; Liberal vs. Conservative Economic Thinking; and The Lesson of Greece

TruPolitics Podcast Episode 21: New Economic Numbers; Slow Growth and Liberal Policy; and Texas as Proof of Conservative Success.

The 21st TruPolitics Podcast. Episode 21 discusses the newly released economic numbers; slow growth and its relationship to liberal policy; and the success of Texas in creating jobs through conservative principles. Download the podcast directly through iTunes for the best sound quality. Search “TruPolitics” in iTunes and then hit “Subscribe.”

TruPolitics Podcast 21: New Economic Numbers; Slow Growth and Liberal Policy; and Texas as Proof of Conservative Success

TruPolitics Podcast Episode 20: Osama bin Laden’s Death; 2012 GOP Candidates; and The Debt Ceiling

The 20th TruPolitics Podcast. Episode 20 covers the death of Osama bin Laden and its implications for future policy; the 2012 Republican Presidential field; and the debt ceiling debate. Download the podcast directly through iTunes for the best sound quality. Search “TruPolitics” in iTunes and then hit “Subscribe.”

TruPolitics Podcast 20: Osama bin Laden; 2012 GOP Field; Debt Ceiling

TruPolitics Podcast Episode 19: Pres. Obama’s Budget Plan; Inflation and Rising Gas Prices; Donald Trump

The 19th TruPolitics Podcast. Episode 19 discusses new research on President Obama’s budget plan; inflation and rising gas and food prices; and Donald Trump’s early Presidential prospects. Download the podcast directly through iTunes for the best sound quality. Search “TruPolitics” in iTunes and then hit “Subscribe.”

TruPolitics Podcast 19: Pres. Obama’s Budget Plan; Inflation and Rising Gas Prices; Donald Trump

TruPolitics Podcast Episode 18: The 2011 Budget Deal; Paul Ryan’s 2012 budget vs. Pres. Obama’s

The 18th TruPolitics Podcast. Episode 18 discusses the 2011 budget deal and near government shutdown; and Paul Ryan’s 2012 Budget vs. President Obama’s vision for America laid out in his recent response speech. Download the podcast directly through iTunes for the best sound quality. Search “TruPolitics” in iTunes and then hit “Subscribe.”

TruPolitics Podcast 18: 2011 Budget Deal; Paul Ryan vs. President Obama

TruPolitics Podcast Episode 16: Pres. Obama’s Int’l Policy and Libya; Federal Waste; NPR and PBS

The 16th TruPolitics Podcast. Episode 16 covers the Obama Administration’s foreign policy and its response to Libya; Federal government waste revealed in the GAO study; Proposed high-speed rail system; and the funding of NPR and PBS. Subscribe through iTunes for the best sound quality–search “TruPolitics” in iTunes and hit “Subscribe.”

TruPolitics Podcast Episode 16: Pres. Obama’s Int’l Policy and Libya; Fed. Government Waste; NPR and PBS

Drill Here, Drill Now

This post was written by Edward Mahee. Writing under a pen name, Mr. Mahee is a legal expert and political analyst.

The recent turmoil in the Middle East has given rise to all manner of speculation concerning the future of that region.  With the revolutions in Tunisia and Egypt, as well as uprisings in Iran, Bahrain, Yemen and Jordan, and with rumblings in Saudi Arabia, the world watches with a mixture of awe, hope and apprehension.  But nowhere is there more immediate concern than in Libya, where Moammar Gaddafi is facing the prospect of the end of his four-decade dictatorship.

While much of the impact of these uprisings in the Middle East remains unclear, one effect is already being felt: In the last ten days, the price of oil has risen from $87/barrel to over $100/barrel.  With the price of crude oil likely to remain elevated for the foreseeable future, higher gasoline, energy, and transportation prices are taking hold. As the economy continues to struggle, even the most modest increase in the price of energy can have a huge impact, and risks driving the economy back into recession. 

Few people realize how dependent we are on oil and its distillates. Every person who drives to work, buys food at a super market, or ships anything, in one way or another pays for it through the price of oil.  Without oil, much economic activity would grind to a halt. 

It is therefore striking that Americans tolerate a system where so much of our livelihood is dependent on oil, when so much of that oil comes from places that are unfriendly to the United States and/or extremely unstable. While the majority of oil consumed by Americans comes from domestic sources, Canada, or Latin America, the interruption of the production of oil anywhere affects the price everywhere since oil is priced on commodity exchanges.  It is basic supply and demand. 

There are thus two ways to reduce oil’s price – increase supply or decrease demand.  Since the 1970s, when President Carter’s advice to the American people was to wear sweaters in response to an oil crisis, we have been encouraged to reduce our demand for energy. Fine. But to keep the economy moving, we need to move things, and to move things we need oil.  At some point, we can only reduce demand so much.

It’s time for the American people to seriously consider increasing the total supply of oil by easing restrictions on drilling, oil shale production and other methods of oil production and distillation.  This will bring jobs, secure our energy supply, and bring the price of oil down over time.  While some get upset over the prospect of increasing domestic oil production, we must face the facts: Short of a major technological breakthrough, American productivity will demand oil. Meaningfully curbing oil demand is difficult, if not impossible—we now must embrace the other side of the equation. As the debate is brought home to struggling Americans paying close to $4 per gallon and facing rising food prices, it is time we take a sober look at supply. 

-Edward Mahee for TruPolitics.net

TruPolitics Podcast Episode 11: The Tax Deal – Political, Economic, and Philosophical Implications

The eleventh TruPolitics Podcast. Episode 11 discusses the tax deal that recently came out of the White House, including political, economic, and philosphical implications. Download directly and subscribe through iTunes for the best sound quality.

TruPolitics Podcast Episode 11 – The Tax Deal – Political, Economic, and Philosphical Implications

The Roots of the Tax Debate: Why Tax At All?

This post was written by Edward Mahee. Writing under a pen name, Mr. Mahee is a legal analyst and political commentator. This is his 13th posting for the site.

On November 30, President Obama invited leaders of both houses of Congress, including the leadership of the incoming Republican majority, to discuss whether and to what extent current tax rates should be extended beyond December 31, 2010.  Leaving aside the last minute timing of such an important issue, it is surprising that with anemic economic growth, persistently high unemployment, and general malaise, that some would even consider raising taxes. But, when viewed through the prism of a fundamental philosophical divide, the issue becomes clear.

Andrew W. Mellon, Treasury Secretary from 1921-1932, stated unambiguous principles he felt ought to guide tax policy: “The problem of the Government is to fix rates [of taxation] which will bring in a maximum amount of revenue to the Treasury and at the same time bear not too heavily on the taxpayer or on business enterprises. A sound tax policy must take into account three factors.  It must produce sufficient revenue for the Government; it must lessen, so far as possible, the burden of taxation on those least able to bear it; and it must also remove those influences which might retard the continued steady development of business and industry on which, in the last analysis, so much of our prosperity depends.”  The underlying principle, then, is very simple—the purpose of taxation is to raise revenue for the maintenance and operation of the government, but in a manner that does not inhibit personal liberty or private enterprise. 

Mellon’s principle is sound, given that the role of taxation is only to raise essential and necessary revenue for the government.  There are many, however, including the current Administration, that fundamentally disagree with that premise.  Rather than raise revenue for the government, taxation provides a vehicle by which the government can control behavior, payoff special interests, and punish or reward certain constituencies as the political class sees fit.  For proof, look no further than the debate of candidates for the Democratic presidential nomination in 2008, featuring then-Senator Barack Obama: When informed that his policy of raising the capital gains tax rate may actually reduce revenue to the federal government, Senator Obama retorted that raising the rate of taxation on capital gains was a question of fairness, not just revenue.

With the United States running more and more into the red, and consequently closer and closer to bankruptcy, the primacy of revenue among the purposes of taxation has reemerged as a lodestar concerning tax policy.  Economist W. Kurt Hauser, a leading thinker on the subject, recently observed that since the end of the Second World War, tax revenues as a percentage of gross domestic product (“GDP”) have averaged fewer than 19% regardless of the top marginal income tax rate.  This is an astonishing observation, since during the period in question the top marginal tax rate on personal income was anywhere between 28% and 92% (currently the top marginal rate is 35%).  How can this be?  According to Mr. Hauser’s November 26 article in the Wall Street Journal:

“Higher taxes discourage the ‘animal spirits’ of entrepreneurship.  When tax rates are raised, taxpayers are encouraged to shift, hide and underreport income.  Taxpayers divert their effort from pro-growth productive investments to seeking tax shelters, tax havens and tax exempt investments.  This behavior tends to dampen economic growth and job creation.  Lower taxes increase the incentives to work, produce, save and invest, thereby encouraging capital formation and jobs.”

Which brings us back to Mr. Mellon’s principle of taxation.  Given that the federal government’s intake of funds from personal taxation is roughly 19% of GDP, shouldn’t its tax policy be aimed at maximizing GDP?  That is, its policy should be able to raise revenue for the government while at the same time not “retard[ing] the continued steady development of business and industry.”  If the government is going to take in 19% of the GDP pie regardless of the top rate, its focus should be on growing the pie, not trying to take a larger slice of a shrinking pie.  Meaning, the government’s tax policies should encourage investment, enterprise and profit. 

Of course, this all hinges on the belief that the goal of the federal government’s tax policy is revenue for the maintenance and operation of itself. Unfortunately, for many on the progressive left, the goal of tax policy is not revenue, but societal control and redistribution.  Which is why, even as it becomes more and more clear that the government is sinking into bankruptcy and the country into malaise, the progressive left will continue to argue that some people “deserve” to have their taxes raised.  If progressives succeed in raising taxes on the “rich”, they can be satisfied that they were able to use the weapon of class warfare successfully.  As more people lose their jobs and capital dwindles, the progressives will look over the decaying world they helped create and console themselves by saying that at least they stuck it to the “rich” man.

-Edward Mahee for TruPolitics.net

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