My latest reading of Bruce Bartlett's The New American Economy: The Failure of Reaganomics and a New Way Forward scared me, to tell you the truth.
I
 usually get scared when I think about the ballooning of federal 
entitlements.  Bartlett, like others, contends that, in the future, in 
order to take care of the increasing number of people who will be 
receiving Medicare and Social Security, payroll taxes will have to go 
up----and that will affect all sorts of people, including the middle 
class.  Or we can borrow or print the money to help pay for the 
entitlements, in which case we'd probably have to put up with inflation 
and higher interest rates.  (And, whereas I have read economists
 set high interest rates against inflation, as if high interest rates 
cure inflation or an abundant money supply keeps interest rates low, 
Bartlett actually makes the point that inflation can lead to high 
interest rates.  If I lend you money, and I realize that the money that I
 will get back from you when you pay me back will be worth less than 
what I loaned you, I may just increase interest rates so that I can get a
 decent amount.)  
We have a deficit, and we have debt.  
Bartlett argues that we're in a worse situation now because other 
countries own a sizable amount of our Treasury securities, and Bartlett 
contends that this situation makes Americans less wealthy and could 
increase the trade deficit.  Moreover, other countries will be 
reluctant to buy our securities, which are a significant source of our 
government's revenue, if they think that we won't pay them back. 
How
 can we solve this problem?  Bartlett says that even going so far as to 
eliminate every domestic discretionary program would not have been 
sufficient in 2008 to get rid of the deficit.  Regarding 
entitlements, Bartlett talks about raising the retirement age so that 
people could qualify for Social Security and Medicare later in life, but
 he doesn't appear to think that even that would be enough.
I 
haven't finished this chapter, but, in what I have read so far, Bartlett
 supports the Value Added Tax as a way to bring in a lot of government 
revenue.  On page 179, he explains what that tax is by telling a story 
about the making of bread.  Suppose that you have a farmer who sells his
 wheat to a miller.  The farmer pays a tax on the wheat's sale price, 
and that tax is a part of the wheat's price, presumably because the 
farmer is passing the cost of the tax on to the miller who's buying the 
wheat.  The miller then makes flour out of that wheat and sells it to 
the baker.  There is a tax on that sale, too, but the miller "subtracts 
the tax he paid when he bought the wheat."  And yet, the baker in buying
 the flour from the miller is paying the tax that was "included by the 
miller, which also includes the tax paid by the farmer."  The baker then
 makes bread and sells it, and in selling the bread he "gets credit for 
all the previous taxes paid."  But, ultimately, the tax's "full 
burden...falls on the final purchaser, the consumer."
I'm a little
 confused here.  Why would the full burden fall on the consumer, if the 
baker was able to get a credit for the previous taxes that he paid (in 
the form of higher prices)?  The baker wouldn't have to pass on 
to the consumer the tax paid by the farmer, and the tax paid by the 
miller, for the baker is getting credit for those taxes, right?
Another
 point that Bartlett makes is that a tax on consumption----such as the 
Value Added Tax----has less of an impact on the economy than the income 
tax because the VAT does nothing to savings, which Bartlett calls "the 
wellspring of growth" (page 177).  Bartlett also says that consumption 
taxes are "less burdensome because people can usually choose to reduce 
their consumption to avoid the tax" (page 177).  But, earlier in
 the book, Bartlett criticizes the tax rebates during George W. Bush's 
Administration because people saved them rather than spending them (page
 138).  Doesn't that imply that spending----consumption----is important 
when it comes to stimulating the economy?  And would a VAT discourage 
consumption? 
On the issue of entitlements and the 
deficit, I hope that there's a way for us to keep our commitments to 
people and not throw them out into the cold, while also avoiding a lot 
of the financial burdens that would negatively impact so many of us.  Is
 this possible?  I don't know.  One thing that comes to my mind is the 
argument that a single-payer system is less costly than what the U.S. 
has.
 
 
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