Foreign Investors and
Governments Keep us Afloat
Origninal title: The Tax-Cut Pendulum and the
Pit
By Jonathan Weisman
Washington Post Staff Writer
Friday, October 8, 2004; Page A01
In 2002, with midterm elections approaching and the
nation edging toward war in Iraq, President Bush's economic team
divided into opposing camps, with one side worried about rising
budget deficits and the other pressing for tax cuts to stimulate
a stagnant economy.
One group, led by Treasury Secretary Paul H. O'Neill and White
House budget director Mitchell E. Daniels Jr., watched anxiously
as the government's 2002 balance sheet swung from a record $313
billion surplus projected when Bush took office to a $157 billion
deficit projected that August. How could the president demand
fiscal discipline from Congress, they argued, then push expensive
reforms of Social Security and the tax code if he continued
cutting taxes?
Members of the House and Senate join President Bush in June
2001 for a signing ceremony at the White House for his first tax
cut, a $1.35 trillion package. It was the first of four tax cuts
Bush has sought in what the White House calls an effort to spur
growth in the economy. (Kevin Lamarque -- Reuters)
The other side, led by White House economists Lawrence B.
Lindsey and R. Glenn Hubbard, focused on economic growth, which
had slipped from a 5 percent surge in the first three months of
2002 to 1.3 percent in the next quarter. Employment had slid by
235,000 jobs between January and September. Deficits would have
little if any effect on the economy, they assured Bush, but if
the president wanted to halt the stock market's slide and prop up
incomes, he had to cut taxes more.
After weeks of debate, Bush made his choice clear, unveiling a
$674 billion tax-reduction package on Jan. 6, 2003, that was
larger and bolder than even Hubbard and Lindsey had expected. The
proposal locked in Bush's record as a tax cutter. But it also
contributed to mounting budget deficits and debt that may prove
to be one of Bush's most enduring legacies.
When Bush took office in January 2001, the government was
forecasting a $5.6 trillion budget surplus between then and 2011.
Instead, it is now expecting to accumulate an extra $3 trillion
in debt -- including a record $415 billion in the fiscal year
that ended Sept. 30. The government has to borrow an average of
more than $1.1 billion a day to pay its bills, and it spends more
on interest payments on the federal debt each year -- about $159
billion -- than it does on education, homeland security, justice
and law enforcement, veterans, international aid, and space
exploration combined.
Without doubt, the fiscal turnaround started with the bursting
of the stock market bubble and was pushed forward by recession,
terrorist attacks and corporate scandals not of the president's
making. But conservative and liberal budget analysts agree that
deficits were increased by the administration's policy choices:
tax cuts amid swelling red ink and the costly invasion of
Iraq.
The consequences are just coming into view. The White House
has ordered draft budgets for 2006 that would cut spending on
homeland security, veterans affairs and education, according to
White House documents. Some economists -- although by no means
most -- see a reckoning on the horizon, when foreign lenders
reject U.S. debt, interest rates rise, and the value of the
dollar crashes.
"The [deficit] pressures going forward are too great to allow
us to borrow these kinds of moneys on the international market on
a sustained basis," said Douglas Holtz-Eakin, a former White
House economist who heads the Congressional Budget Office.
Through it all Bush has stood his ground, pushing through four
tax cuts in four years totaling $1.9 trillion over a decade, and
opposing repeated efforts to roll back any of them.
"We have a deficit challenge in the short and medium term,"
said Joshua B. Bolten, the director of the White House Office of
Management and Budget. But, he added, "the most important
economic responsibility of a president is to make sure the
economy is growing and people are working. Imposing a surtax or
any kind of tax increase would be exactly the wrong thing to do
at this time or going into the future."
Anatomy of a Deficit
Four years ago, the outlook was very different. During a
campaign debate in Boston, presidential candidate Bush surveyed
the economic landscape and forecast that "over the next 10 years,
there's going to be $25 trillion of revenue that comes into our
Treasury, and we anticipate spending $21 trillion." He urged
taking advantage of that surplus to cut taxes for "the
hard-working people who pay the bills."
In retrospect, Bolten now says, that vision was a mirage.
"Those surpluses never existed; that's the important part," he
said. "It's not that there was some change in reality. It's that
the projections were simply wrong."
But other conservative and liberal analysts believe Bush
helped change reality. As of 2001, the White House expected
surpluses of nearly $1.3 trillion through 2004. Instead, the
government fell into debt by roughly $850 billion. According to
the White House budget office, about half of the change can be
attributed to factors largely outside the president's control:
recession, a weak recovery, the bursting of the stock market
bubble and the unanticipated costs of the 2001 terrorist
attacks.
But the other 50 percent is attributable to policy
choices.
The four tax cuts account for about 30 percent of the change.
The remaining 20 percent was spending, including the cost of the
war in Afghanistan and the preemptive invasion of Iraq. Since
2001, government spending has risen 23 percent, from $1.86
trillion to $2.29 trillion this year. Defense spending increased
48 percent, while non-defense spending went from $343
billion in 2001 to $436 billion, a 27 percent
increase.
Congress has allocated $174 billion so far for the Iraq war
alone, with another emergency spending request expected early
next year. Among the larger non-defense items Bush signed were a
multiyear extension of agriculture subsidies and a prescription
drug benefit for Medicare, the largest expansion of an
entitlement program since the 1960s.
"The Bush administration didn't just sit there and watch the
deficit get wider. They actually exacerbated it," said Larry
Kantor, global head of economics and market strategy at the
British financial giant Barclays Capital.
The president's first tax cut, at a cost of $1.35 trillion,
was passed in June 2001 by a Congress still convinced the
government would run a large surplus even without those tax
revenues.
But by 2002, a "dramatic reversal of revenues" was becoming
clear, Bolten said. Policy decisions going forward would be a
choice, White House economic advisers believed, between the
government's long-term fiscal health and the nation's short-run
economic well-being.
Although some members of Bush's economic team advised fiscal
restraint that crucial year, their influence waned as the economy
staggered. In March 2002, Bush signed further tax reductions
worth $42 billion over 10 years. Three months later, Lindsey was
counseling Bush to cut taxes again. "Early on I was the most
radical advocate," he said.
O'Neill and Commerce Secretary Donald L. Evans -- the more
deficit-conscious members of the economic team -- pushed Lindsey
back, arguing the economy was on the mend.
But on Aug. 13, at an economic summit in Waco, Tex., business
executives and affluent GOP donors warned that the economy
remained in trouble and pushed their own tax-cut ideas.
The political winds shifted decisively against O'Neill and the
deficit hawks.
In an Aug. 23 memo detailed by a former economic aide, Bush's
economic advisers laid out a menu of tax-cut options, outlining
policies of intentionally modest cost.
Four days later, in a conference call with White House Chief
of Staff Andrew H. Card Jr., budget director Daniels joined
O'Neill in expressing concern that another tax cut would
undermine efforts to demand fiscal restraint from Congress,
according to staff notes from the time. Daniels, a Republican who
is running for Indiana governor, declined to be interviewed.
Amid those divisions, the economic team gathered in the Oval
Office on Oct. 4. Lindsey pushed a 50 percent reduction in the
taxation of capital gains and dividends and an expansion of
savings limits on 401(k) plans and individual retirement
accounts, at a cost of $27.3 billion a year. The Congressional
Budget Office had just increased its deficit forecast to $157
billion, but Hubbard assured the president that a shortfall that
size would not significantly raise interest rates.
"The president's body language was 'Is this enough?' " said
one participant, who spoke on the condition of anonymity for fear
of angering other members of the team.
The package languished until after the 2002 midterm election,
with Bush convinced it could not pass unless Republicans gained
control of the Senate. When they did, the policymakers swung into
high gear. At a meeting Nov. 12, a consensus formed on
accelerating income tax rate cuts, eliminating taxes on half of
all dividends, and passing a one-year tax write-off for new
business investment. Kathleen B. Cooper, the Commerce
Department's chief economist, protested that rising deficits
would boost interest rates and mitigate the economic benefit;
Holtz-Eakin countered that any interest rate rise would be
tiny.
Days later, at a meeting with the vice president, O'Neill
"tipped his hand," said an administration participant in the
session, and warned that the government was careening "toward a
fiscal crisis." But by then, the Treasury secretary was virtually
alone. On Dec. 6, he was fired.
A Dec. 28 memo from Lindsey's deputy, Keith Hennessey,
cautioned Bush that his advisers were divided over whether he
should cut the top two income tax rates or limit the cuts to
lower-income and middle-class taxpayers. Daniels warned that cuts
to the top tax rate would prompt a new round of accusations that
the administration favors the rich.
But on Jan. 6, when Bush unveiled the package, he held nothing
back, calling for even steeper dividend tax cuts than his staff
envisioned, and income tax rate cuts for all income levels.
Economic aides said the president made the decision himself,
subordinating fiscal concerns to philosophy: If it was wrong to
"double-tax" dividends, then that tax should be eliminated, not
merely reduced. If some taxpayers deserved lower income tax
rates, all of them did.
Congress gave Bush his income tax cuts and slashed dividends
and capital gains taxes. Lawmakers trimmed the cost of the
proposal to $350 billion, but only by declaring that its most
politically popular provisions would expire in 2005. As expected,
Congress overwhelmingly voted to extend those expiring
provisions, at an additional cost of $146 billion.
Staying Afloat
To finance its deficits, the Treasury has increasingly looked
to investors overseas, especially foreign governments, to buy
U.S. Treasury bonds. But recent economic data suggest foreign
buyers may be losing interest, afraid that a sudden drop in the
value of the dollar will upend portfolios swollen with U.S.
currency.
According to a Treasury Department report released this month,
net foreign purchases of U.S. bonds fell 45 percent in July, to
$22.4 billion, while purchases by foreign central banks plummeted
76 percent, to $4 billion -- the lowest levels in a about a year.
Sung Won Sohn, chief economist at Wells Fargo Bank, warned
clients recently that foreign governments are already cutting
back, leaving the Treasury dependent on unreliable bond
traders.
"The U.S. will rely increasingly on less stable sources of
funding and pay higher interest rates," he said. "It is a fait
accompli that the dollar will depreciate further. The dollar
depreciation will lead to higher inflation and interest rates,
hurting the economy."
That downturn follows a record influx of foreign lending to
the United States that accelerated under the Bush administration
from $19.2 billion in 2001 to $118 billion in 2002 to $279
billion in 2003.
Foreign governments lent the Treasury $3.5 billion in 2001 and
$7.1 billion in 2002. Last year, the figure soared fifteenfold,
to $109 billion. Japanese reserves of U.S. Treasuries climbed
from $317 billion when Bush came to office to $695 billion in
July. During the president's term, China surpassed Britain as the
United States' second largest foreign lender, with its holdings
more than tripling from $50 billion in December 2000 to $166
billion in July.
The situation may put Washington in a bind.
If foreign investors stop buying Treasury bonds and turn away
in a herd-minded rush, interest rates would shoot up to try to
attract those buyers back so the government can pay its bills.
The value of the dollar will drop -- perhaps sharply. Heavily
indebted U.S. consumers, facing rising interest rates and soaring
prices for imports, will cut spending. Moribund economies in
Europe and Japan will not be able to pick up the slack.
The result? "Global recession," predicted John Williamson, a
senior fellow at the Institute for International Economics.
If the lending splurge continues, however -- and some feel it
is bound to, if only because China and Japan now have an interest
in propping up the dollar to keep their exports cheap -- some
fear U.S. policymaking will be constrained by the reliance on
foreign capital. "What does this mean to our bargaining power as
a nation?" asked Michael D. Granoff, president of Pomona Capital,
an investment firm. "If China is financing our debt, how tough
can we be the next time there's a Tiananmen Square?"
Treasury economists say such concerns are exaggerated, arguing
that the U.S. economy is large enough to absorb much more
borrowing. Compared with the overall economy, total outstanding
U.S. debt is about 35 percent of gross domestic product, said
Randy Quarles, assistant Treasury secretary for international
affairs. Japan's debt, by comparison, is roughly 100 percent of
GDP.
"We're not going to tell you that we don't want to see smaller
deficits," said Timothy S. Bitsberger, acting assistant Treasury
secretary for financial markets. "But we see nothing in the
market to suggest we're having trouble funding our deficit."
Bush has shown no sign of worry either. Since the 2003 tax cut
passed, he has beaten back repeated Democratic efforts to roll
back some tax cuts to pay for the war in Iraq. Earlier this year,
he rebuffed demands by some moderate Republicans to offset the
cost of future tax cuts with spending reductions or tax loophole
closures. His 2005 budget proposal included $1.4 trillion in
additional tax-cut costs, including expansive new savings
accounts that would eliminate taxes on capital gains, dividends
and interest for virtually every American.
In July, when GOP leaders moved to extend expiring tax cuts
for just two years to hold down the cost, the president quashed
the deal, demanding a five-year extension at a cost of $146
billion. He signed the bill this week.
"You can pull any economic textbook off the shelf to see we
did exactly the right thing," Lindsey said. "It has been an
unqualified success."
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