Stockman Returneth April 2, 2001 Nation by
William Greider
Twenty years ago
this season, when another new Republican President arrived in Washington to
push for massive income-tax reductions, I was having breakfast every other
Saturday morning with David Stockman, the brainy young budget director, and
collecting his insider account of the Reagan revolution. Stockman was the enfant terrible who implemented the
supply-side agenda and promised to achieve the improbable--reduce taxes
dramatically and double defense spending, while cutting other federal programs
sufficiently to produce a balanced budget. It didn't work out that way. Ronald
Reagan's great legislative triumph of 1981 destabilized federal fiscal policy
for nearly two decades, creating the massive structural deficits that were not
finally extinguished until a few years ago. Washington seems about to replay
history as farce, albeit on a less threatening scale. It prompts me to reflect
on what, if anything, was learned from the revolution.
My private sessions
with Stockman stretched over nine months and led to a controversial magazine
article, "The Education of David Stockman," in which I disclosed the
contradictions and internal swordplay behind Reaganomics, but the real
sensation was Stockman's own growing doubts and disillusionment with the
doctrine. Both of us were excoriated in the aftermath. The Gipper likened me to
his would-be assassin John Hinckley. Stockman was roasted for duplicity and
cynical manipulations; for concealing the truth about the looming deficits
while Congress plunged forward in fateful error. Stockman was guileful, yes,
but it was his intellectual honesty that shocked Washington. That brief moment
of truth-telling resonates with the current delusions and deceptions. A lot of
what he said twenty years ago seems painfully relevant.
"None of us
really understands what's going on with all these numbers," the budget
director confided during intense budget-cutting battles in the spring of 1981.
That admission should be engraved over the door at the Treasury, the Capitol
and the White House. Projections of fabulous budget surpluses that provide the
premise for this year's political action are no less airy-fairy. Nonetheless,
official fantasy becomes the operating truth, so long as everyone bows to it.
Stockman's wishful forecasts on economic growth were nicknamed Rosy Scenario by
his colleagues, but now the Congressional Budget Office has matched his
rosiness. The economy is expanding this year by 2.4 percent and faster next
year, according to the CBO. Actually, right now it's headed into the zero-minus
territory known as recession.
Stockman's boldest
accounting gimmick--reporting $40 billion in budget cuts but declining to
identify them--was dubbed by insiders "the magic asterisk." Bush has
already topped him with his "magic blueprint" and the miraculous
"trillion-dollar reserve" he saves and spends at the same time. The
new President has not actually issued a real budget, only a
"blueprint" that leaves out the grisly, painful details of what
spending will get whacked. Dubya sounds like the Queen of Hearts: Tax cuts
first, punishment later! Congressional nerds protest, but Bush intends to ram
through his tax cuts before anyone has been given an honest picture of the
fiscal consequences.
"Do you realize
the greed that came to the forefront?" Stockman exclaimed to me twenty
years ago. "The hogs were really feeding." As the Reagan White House
lost control of the action, Democrats and Republicans engaged in a furious bidding
war to see which party could deliver more tax breaks and other boodle to the
special-interest hogs (Republicans won, but the Dems gave it a good try). The
Bushies recognize this danger and are trying to wall off the usual business
greedheads from exploiting the same opening this year. The deal-making may
still begin, however, if the White House is a few votes shy and needs to seduce
a few hungry senators with special favors. As Stockman learned, if you buy one
senator, you might have to buy them all.
Another of Stockman's
vivid metaphors is the centerpiece for 2001--the "Trojan horse"
approach to rewarding the rich. Giving everyone the same percentage rate cut
sounds fair, but actually delivers most of the money to the very wealthy, who
pay the top rate. Supply-side doctrine "was always a Trojan horse to bring
down the top rate," Stockman revealed. "It's kind of hard to sell
trickle-down economics, so the supply-side formula was the only way to get a
tax policy that was really trickle down." This year's new wrinkle is a Keynesian
twist. Instead of talking about rich investors who need a little encouragement
to invest in America, Bush talks about the waitresses who need a little cash to
pay off their credit-card debts.
The most disturbing
difference I see in 2001 is political--the role reversal between the two major
parties. What Republicans learned from the revolution is this: Deficit spending
doesn't really count for that much in politics--not among average voters--and a
party will not be punished for creating fiscal disorder as long as other good
things seem to happen. Democrats used to understand this as a visceral matter
but have forgotten the street-smarts their party knew in olden days. On fiscal
discipline, the two have swapped positions. Republicans, once the scolds, are
now the reckless feel-good party, willing to risk big deficits in order to
deliver goodies to main constituencies. Democrats, perhaps wishing for
respectability, have become the party of rectitude, preaching forbearance of
pleasure. Republicans want voters to have a little fun. Democrats sound like
nervous bookkeepers.
Leaving aside
economic consequences, Democrats have dealt themselves a very weak position,
even though they're largely right about the budget accounting. Most Americans
are not fiscal experts and cannot be expected to absorb all the fine-print
arguments about cause and effect. Think of the old Far Side cartoon with a dog
listening to his master. All the dog hears is: "Fido, blah, blah, blah,
Fido, blah, blah, blah." What voters hear from Republicans is: "Want
to cut your taxes, blah, blah, blah, want to cut your taxes, blah, blah,
blah." What voters hear from Democrats is: "Must pay down the debt
first, blah, blah, blah, must pay down the debt first, blah, blah, blah."
For skeptical voters with already low expectations of government, this is not a
tough choice.
The great
accomplishment of Reagan and the supply-siders was to persuade the old-guard
Republican Party that its root- canal approach to fiscal policy was a
loser--and that recklessness can be a win-win proposition for their side. If
the Trojan horse approach succeeds in winning regressive tax-cuts, the GOP
delivers huge rewards to its favorite clients. If this also creates a big hole
in the federal budget, that's OK too, since runaway deficits will throw another
collar around the size of the federal government and provide yet another reason
to slash the liberals' social spending. With clever marketing, the GOP may even
persuade voters it was spendthrift Democrats who created the red ink. Even
recession is OK if the timing is as lucky as the Gipper's. When this recession
ends, Bush will credit his tax cuts for the recovery and claim vindication in
time for re-election.
Democrats,
meanwhile, are the "responsibles," telling the people to save their
allowance for a rainy day. They were led into this cul-de-sac by the champion
of artful deception, Bill Clinton. Two years ago, when the prospect of
burgeoning federal surpluses arose, Clinton devised a very clever ploy to hold
off Republican tax-cutters. We will not spend the extra trillions, he
announced, we will pay off the national debt. Democrats felt exceedingly
virtuous about this position, although they understood that the subtext was
quite different: The surpluses would allow government to do big things again
for people--someday, but not yet. A different kind of leader might have
recognized that politics doesn't wait for ten-year budget projections. If
Democrats wished to accomplish big things like universal healthcare or helping
debt-soaked families, they should have gone for it right then while the
resources were available. Instead, Clinton's stratagem actually adopted the
old-time religion that Reagan had shed--a loss of nerve that is the opposite of
activist government. Some Dems are agitating to change that, proposing a
genuine commitment to healthcare reform and other measures, but others have
internalized the bookkeeper politics and are preaching hair-shirt economics:
Cancel any tax cuts if a severe recession wipes out our sacred surplus. That's
a righteous recipe for more pain.
One more point: Both
parties are playing with a phony deck of cards. No matter what unfolds this
season, the government is not going to reduce the "national debt." On
the contrary, the government's total indebtedness is going to keep growing
steadily, from $5.6 trillion right now to $6.7 trillion by 2011. Despite what
you read in the newspapers, that occurs with or without tax cuts and even if
all the outstanding Treasury bonds are paid off (if you still don't believe it,
check the CBO's latest budget forecast with its chart on page 17). The awkward
fact neither party brings up is that federal financing has depended crucially
on collecting more money than it needs from working people since 1983, when
both parties collaborated in a great crime of bait and switch. After Reagan cut
taxes for the wealthy and business in 1981, he turned around two years later
and raised Social Security payroll taxes dramatically on workers (earnings
above $76,000 are exempted from Social Security taxes). Ever since, workers
have been paying in extra money toward their future retirement--trillions more
than needed now by Social Security--and the government simply borrows the
surplus revenue to spend on other things: upper-income tax cuts or paying off
Treasury bonds or reducing the fiscal damage from deficits in the operating
budget.
Taxing one class of
citizens--the broad ranks of working people--so government can devote the money
to other people and purposes is not only wrong but profoundly deceptive, bait
and switch on a grand scale. Government still owes workers the money, of
course, and someday will have to find the borrowed trillions somewhere, either
by raising taxes or borrowing the money or possibly by cutting Social Security
benefits. When FICA taxes were raised in 1983, Reagan at first objected and
reminded aides that he was opposed to raising taxes--of any kind. David
Stockman reassured him. If the rising payroll-tax burden was imposed on young
working people, they would eventually revolt and Social Security would
self-destruct of its own weight. The Gipper liked that and gave his OK. The
same objective, now called privatization, shows up again this year on George W.
Bush's agenda. He proposes to "save" Social Security by destroying
it.