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7/29/85 89
ANOTHER SHADY BAIT-AND-SWITCH TAX DEAL
It was probably only a matter o f time before congressional law-
makers, unable to say no to the constituencies that thrive on more
spending, would take what they perceive to be the easy road to
deficit reduction--a tax on business. This is exactly what they
seem to be doing in advocati n g a hefty tax on imported oil. If
Ronald Reagan bows to such a tax simply to get a budget agreement,
it will be an unambiguous signal that his "unequivocal"
campaign.vow not to raise taxes was nothing more than an empty
vote-catching ploy. His credibility would be in shambles. As bad, a
tax increase would relieve Congress of the pressure to make
painful, but necessary, reductions in federal spending. Perhaps
worse, an oil tax would severely burden the American economy just
when concern is growing about its future performance. Reagan should
remember the hard lesson of 1982. In that year he was persuaded
that the tax hike in the Tax Equity and Fiscal Responsi- bility Act
(TEFRA) would cut the five-year federal deficit by one-third.
Officials and lawmakers pro m ised, moreover, to cut $3 in spending
for every $1 raised by TEFRA. The President reluctantly accepted
this deal. The result: the deficit continued to soar and the
spending cuts proved illusory. Now Congress is trying to lure the
President with another sh a dy bait-and-switch tax deal. As 1982
proved, tax increases do not cut deficits. They merely give
Congress an excuse not to cut spending. Lawmakers have already
shown that they are not serious about eliminating programs and
cutting waste. The Grace Commiss i on's catalogue of redundant
military.bases, civilian. program inefficiencies, and pork barrel
projects was given short shrift on Capitol Hill. The Office of
Management and Budget's FY 1986 Budget listed 20 programs to be
eliminated, saving $36 billion ove r three years. This was whittled
down to 13 (saving $22 billion) by the Senate and then to just one
(saving $12.5 billion) by the House. Talk of actually eliminating
programs now has all but vanished. And just last week, a minority
of the Senate blocked th e move to institute a line-item veto,
which would have enabled the President to slice the fat out of the
budget. For Ronald Reagan to compound this political failure by
agreeing to a tax increase would be throwing red meat to insatiable
spenders and hungry lobbyists.
2
As expected, congressional advocates are making this poisoned apple
as pretty as they can for the President. The $5 a barrel "import
feel' proposal comes at a time when oil prices are falling. And an
import tax does not show up on a voter 's 1040 tax form. But
this'only cruelly ob- scures its many damaging effects. First, an
oil import tax would blunt the much-needed economic boost that is
coming from falling oil prices. oil is a basic cost of produc- tion
for all American industry, and a c omponent of virtually all export
costs. As such, a rise in the price of fuel would drag the economy
substantially at a time when concernis growing that output is
slowing. According to a 1982 Congressional Budget Office study, a
$5 a barrel oil import tax w ould raise gasoline prices by up to 1V
a gallon and cost nearly 200,000 American jobs. And it would push
up the cost of goods the U.S. exports at a time when most Americans
are very worried by the nation's $120 billion trade deficit. Since
foreign nations , of course, will not be adding a new tax on oil,
they will have an extra advantage in competing with U.S.-made
goods. Second, an oil import fee is a regressive tax. Because it is
passed on to the consumer in the form of price increases on such
basic goods and services as gasoline, transportation, heating oil,
and food, its main burden falls on middle- and especially
low-income Americans. Third'price rises induced by the oil tax
would boost the consumer price index. This would revive fears of
rekindled infl a tion, thereby reducing confidence in the economy
by domestic and overseas investors. moreover, a rise in the index
would trigger cost-of-living adjustments in dozens of federal
programs. The result: a tax designed to cut the deficit would boost
outlays. F o urth, an import tax would send a protectionist signal
to the world's traders, inviting retaliation. Britain now exports
more oil than Saudi Arabia, and the U.S. imports two-thirds of its
oil needs from non-OPEC producers. The U.S.'s biggest source of
fore i gn oil, in fact, is Mexico; a drop in its oil revenues, that
is the certain consequence of a U.S. oil import fee, would make it
more difficult for Mexico to repay its loans to the U.S. and to
sustain the economic health required for political stability. H i
tting oil exporters at a time of falling world prices would hardly
make them inclined to reduce barriers to American goods. The oil
tax could be the make-or-break decision for Ronald'Reagan's entire
economic program. If he stands firm, as he often has in t he past,
he will galvanize his many congressional supporters and will deny
Con- gress an escape route from cutting spending. But if he reneges
on the no-tax pledge, he will let Congress off the hook, demoralize
his embattled supporters, and threaten the v itality of the
American economy. There could be no better recipe for a lame duck
presidency. Stuart M. Butler, Ph.D. Director of Domestic Policy
Studies
For Further Reading: Thomas M. Humbert, "Breach of Faith: The
Tax Package," Heritage Foundation Backgrounder No. 201, August 7,
1982. Oil Import Tariffs: Alternative Scenarios and Their Effects
(Conressional Budget Office, 1982).
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