William_T._Bianco,_David_T._Canon]_American_Polit

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554554 Chapter 15 | Economic Policy

Given the tenuous relationship between fiscal policy and the state of the economy,
critics have suggested an alternative rationale to justify large budget deficits in
relatively good economic times. (Recall that a Keynesian perspective says that the
government should run surpluses during good times, and supply-siders argue that tax
cuts should produce surpluses rather than deficits.) Instead of being primarily an effort
to stimulate the economy, large tax cuts and budget deficits like those of the 1980s and
early 2000s are the only way to cut down the size of government—they are, as Reagan’s
budget director David Stockman called them, an attempt to “starve the beast.”^43 If
there is no money available, liberals will not be able to propose new programs, and
conservatives will be more likely to cut existing programs. The only alternative
is raising taxes, which is usually politically unpopular, even though our tax bite is
relatively small compared with that of other countries, ranking fourth from the bottom
of nations belonging to the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development
(OECD) (see Figure 15.6). The other possibility, of course, is to simply accept large
budget deficits as a permanent part of the economic landscape. Although that may be
politically tempting, it is not a sustainable strategy in the long run.

Redistributive Implications of Fiscal Policy Fiscal policy may have a relatively
modest impact on the economy, but it determines how the tax burden is distributed
and which parts of the economy and policy areas benefit from federal spending.
In other words, fiscal policy has redistributive implications. There are two ways of
thinking about the characteristics of federal taxes: (1) the different types of taxes

FIGURE
15.6 45.9
45.3
44.2
44.1
44.1
42.9
42.7
39.4
38.8
38.6
38.0
37.6
37.1
37.0
36.4
34.7
34.4
34.3
34.0
33.6
33.5
33.2
32.7
32.1
31.7
31.2
30.7
30.2
28.2
27.8
26.3
26.0
25.5
23.0
20.4
17.2

Tax revenue as a percentage of GDP (2013)
Denmark
France
Belgium
Finland
Sweden
Italy
Austria
Hungary
Netherlands
Greece
Norway
Germany
Luxembourg
Slovenia
Iceland
Estonia
Portugal
OECD - Average
Czech Republic
Poland
Spain
United Kingdom
Slovak Republic
New Zealand
Canada
Israel
Japan
Latvia
Australia
Switzerland
Korea
United States
Turkey
Ireland
Chile
Mexico

Comparing
Global Tax Rates

Tax rates vary considerably around
the world. Given the data below, do
you feel that taxes in the United States
are too low or too high?

Source: OECD.org, Tax Policy Analysis,
Revenue Statistics, http://stats.oecd.org/
index.aspx?DataSetCode=REV (accessed
4/24/18).

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