Papa John’s advertisements on AA tickets
August 4, 2008
Boskinomics Is a Recipe for Confusion
August 1, 2008

I was surprised to read noted economist Michael Boskin’s op-ed in the WSJ and his take on the economy and the election. Basically the article states that Obama will raise taxes and push the US into recession.
- Some economists think we already are headed for a recession. So it doesn’t seem like a sound conclusion that Obama higher taxes will lead to a recession if the US is already on its way.
- There seems to be some maxim in popular culture that says low taxes are good and high taxes are bad. The lowest possible tax rate is 0% and the highest is 100%. I don’t think anybody is arguing that they want 0%…100% is equally insane. So, I don’t understand why economists don’t start speaking about the optimum tax rate. Boskin seems to be using supermarket logic. “Obama wants to raises taxes….isn’t that bad blah blah”.
- Presidents don’t raise or lower taxes. The congress does that.
- I don’t think it’s accurate to characterize Bill Clinton has having a big government agenda when Bush is the king of big government. In 1998, the US budget was $1.7 trillion. In 2008 the budget is $2.9 trillion. That’s a 70% increase in ten years. The US population increased from circa 270 million to 304 million, a 12% increase. Let’s assume around a 3% inflation adjustment over 10 years which is roughly 35%. So our population increased by 12%, our inflation by 35% and our federal budget by 70%. That’s big government.
- As a small business owner, paying taxes means you’re doing well. I started a medical software company during college, and the amount of paperwork was astounding. If you want to encourage growth, a reasonable solution is making the regulatory overhead lower, not lowering taxes. Between city, county, state and federal taxes, regulations and licenses it stifles what small businesses want to do most: work on their business, not fill out government forms. Another brilliant idea is Mark Cuban’s proposal to abolish taxes for under 25 person companies.

