Are Buttigieg’s Latest Airline Rules Going to Get People Killed?
These Ugly, Little Schmucks Need to Face Consequences
Top Biden Aides Didn't Have Anything Nice to Say About Karine Jean-Pierre: Report
The Terrorists Are Running the Asylum
Biden Responds to Trump's Challenge to Debate Before November
Oh Look, Another Terrible Inflation Report
Senior Sounds Off After USC Cancels Its Main Graduation Ceremony
There's a Big Change in How Biden Now Walks to and From Marine...
US Ambassador to the UN Calls Russia's Latest Veto 'Baffling'
Southern California Official Makes Stunning Admission About the Border Crisis
Another State Will Not Comply With Biden's Rewrite of Title IX
'Lack of Clarity and Moral Leadership': NY Senate GOP Leader Calls Out Democratic...
Liberals Freak Out As Another So-Called 'Don't Say Gay Bill' Pops Up
Here’s Why One University Postponed a Pro-Hamas Protest
Leader of Columbia's Pro-Hamas Encampment: Israel Supporters 'Don't Deserve to Live'
OPINION

Dan Mitchell's Seven Minutes of Sanity

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Townhall.com.
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement

You may think there isn't much common-sense anywhere close to Capitol Hill, but less than a ten minute drive away there is a veritable wellspring to be found in the person of Dan Mitchell, Senior Fellow at CATO.  Mitchell is an expert on tax policy and supply-side economics.

Advertisement

With the clock ticking rapidly to the end of the year when higher tax rates and budget sequestration are scheduled to automatically kick in, lawmakers are deadlocked over a solution to avoid going over "the fiscal cliff." 

Most of the attention has focused on sucking more money out of the taxpayers pocket and into the U.S. Treasury.  Barack Obama and Tim Geithner remain in their "no-deal-without-higher-tax-rates" bunker.  The President wants $1.6 trillion more.  Republicans are willing to talk about "revenue" increases even if not higher tax rates.  They have put $800 billion on the table.

But, Mitchell points out that barring a recession, government will get more revenue even without raising tax rates – quite a lot more, in fact. "Indeed, the Congressional Budget Office projects that tax revenue will climb by an average of more than 6 percent annually over the next 10 years –even if the 2001 and 2003 tax cuts are made permanent," Mitchell explains.     

Wow!  But, I thought Barack Obama and Nancy Pelosi said those Bush Tax Cuts cost us hundreds of billions, created the trillion dollar deficits, and caused the recession?

If the President and other politicians really wanted a "balanced" solution to the nation's fiscal crisis, Mitchell knows exactly how to make it happen.  "All that's really needed to bring red ink under control is a modest bit of spending restraint," he writes in a recent memo

Advertisement

And, then there's Mitchell's Golden Rule: "Good fiscal policy exists when the private sector grows faster than the public sector, while fiscal ruin is inevitable if government spending grows faster than the productive part of the economy." 

But, since 2007, federal spending has increased nearly 30 percent while the economy expanded just over 8 percent.  Sounds a lot like Mitchell's formula for "fiscal ruin," doesn't it?

Back in 2010 when the politicians were also discussing the fiscal mess, Mitchell produced the following seven minute video.  It is as relevant today as it was then.  Within the Washington cacophony, Mitchell is a tiny island of sanity. 

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos