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To:
The Honorable Richard Armey,
House Majority Leader
From: Rep.
Richard Baker Chairman,
House Subcommittee on Capital Markets
Subject:
Will the economic stimulus plan
include our strongest weapon?
he
evidence of the terrorists’ “success” in devastating Americans was
brutally clear the moment the attacks transpired, and immediately
forged consensus that our course was clear:
War had been
waged against us, and no amount of increased home security alone
would be sufficient to stop future attacks by such cold-bloodedly
calculating and determined enemies. We had to take the fight to
the terrorists, to seek and destroy their networks wherever they
reside, and render them incapable of any future atrocities against
our fellow Americans.
Evidence of
the terrorists’ “success” in disrupting America’s economy, clearly
a co-target of their attacks, has been slower to accumulate, but
is now no less clear and no less demanding our resolve for swift
and bold action to counteract further economic pain for the American
people.
Congress has
rightly discussed an “economic stimulus package,” taking expert
counsel from Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan and former
Clinton Treasury Secretary Robert Rubin. Nobody has a higher regard
than I do for Mr. Greenspan and Mr. Rubin. However, I have misgivings
about their messages of restraint being fully representative of
the majority of concerns being voiced across America, from Main
Street to Wall Street and back again.
We received
the additional information Mr. Greenspan advised us to wait for
before taking action. The markets have lost $1 trillion in worth
since Sept. 11; jobless claims were reported last week at decade-long
highs; new GDP estimates indicate an almost certain period of recession.
Likewise, the focus on the bond market and long-term interest rates
in Mr. Rubin’s model, whereby deficit reduction leads to economic
growth, has been challenged by events leading back to the start
of 2000, when our slide toward recession commenced simultaneous
with the height of federal budget surpluses. Clearly other weaknesses
have been at play here.
Last week
the president called for “aggressive action” with a stimulus package
in the range of $75 billion. The markets rallied on the announcement
itself, even while the details will take some weeks to iron out.
However, if in the name of bipartisan cooperation these discussions
to date have included the advice of Mr. Greenspan and Mr. Rubin,
I have personally found it difficult to believe that, for the sake
of “equal time,” they have not also included a voice advocating
an aggressive Reaganesque, pro-growth agenda.
I would point
out that a number of other economists and policymakers also played
a key role in a 17-year period of growth that is unparalleled in
American history, and their voices should also be heard. As it appears
there will be more discussions, I strongly urge you to recommend
the presence of at least one of any number of such individuals.
The list, in my opinion, might include former Rep. Jack Kemp, economists
Lawrence Kudlow and Arthur Laffer, Wall Street Journal editor
Robert Bartley, former Fed chairman Paul Volcker, and even economist-policymaker
Sen. Phil Gramm.
Last week
you asked colleagues to consider four pro-growth principles to guide
an economic stimulus package. While tax policy is not my usual legislative
field of expertise, I believe I have a unique perspective on what
might best be done now to aid our ailing capital markets, and I
offer the following specific suggestions as a follow-up to the principles
you outlined:
Reduce taxation rates on capital gains.
Call
for immediate conference action on legislation passed overwhelmingly
earlier this year by both the House and Senate to address hidden
over-taxation of SEC fees, saving investors over $14 billion in
the next decade by reducing the fees they pay every time they
trade stocks.
Pass
bipartisan legislation establishing legal certainty over counter-party
failure in derivatives contracts, by allowing for the netting
or offsetting of claims outside of bankruptcy proceedings involving
one or more of the counter-parties.
Right now
the single greatest threat to our economy is the continually squeezed
level of investment capital that fuels job creation, business expansion,
and technological advancement. The latter two of my proposals are
simple tools we already have at our disposal to increase efficiency
of capital flow at a time when the markets need it most.
For the sake
of bipartisan economic action, it was reasonable to accommodate
certain spending provisions, which constituted defensive measures
taken against losses associated with Sept. 11. But here’s another
truly “defensive” measure. If House Republicans need to prove a
commitment to lower income taxpayers, then it should first and foremost
cover our men and women in uniform putting their lives on the line
for their fellow Americans. So why not a means-tested, total elimination
of federal income taxes on armed services personnel serving on combat-zone
and non-combat-zone active duty?
But now is
also the time to review every known method to stimulate economic
growth and not just concentrate on how to respond to losses. Some
offensive-minded proposals include speeding up and making permanent
the tax cuts enacted earlier this year, reducing corporate tax rates,
and accelerating depreciation or expensing of business capital investments.
However, I
believe the first proposal cutting capital-gains tax rates
is quite simply the strongest, quickest, and most accurate
arrow in the government’s economic-stimulus quiver. To leave it
unused would be akin to mounting a military offensive of troop advancements
while leaving on the ground an initial swift and powerful air campaign
to fortify their movements.
Capital-gains
tax cuts have historically provided the economy the biggest bang
for the buck primarily because they are the most broadly based,
with benefits simultaneously impacting individuals, corporations,
and the capital markets. In fact, individuals gain in the short-
and long-terms, with immediate incentives for greater returns on
investor risk-taking, and longer-range potential prosperity for
investors from a stronger market as well as for non-investors through
job creation that accompanies a growing economy.
The usual
argument that capital-gains tax cuts are “only for the rich” ignores
the populist reality emerging from a paradigm shift in investor
demographics: market participation by some 100 million investors,
or 52% of American households, with an average annual income of
$50,000 or average household assets of $60,000. A new argument
an unintended market sell-off can be met with purely investment
incentive, by reducing rates only on those made after Sept. 11.
I agree with
GOP Sen. Gramm and Democratic Sen. Zell Miller, who when they introduced
legislation for capital-gains reduction last week agreed it should
stand alongside several other mutually agreed-upon provisions. But
more importantly, they said, it enjoys far greater bipartisan support
than many realize, provided it has a chance to be voted on.
It seems to
me that now is precisely the time for this sizable number of like-minded
legislators to come forward and voice their support for an economic
plan that recognizes that “the best defense is a good offense.”
Let me pledge to you whatever assistance you might need to marshal
our message forward.
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