The American Hunger Games
The Six Top Republican Candidates Take Economic
Policy Into the Wilderness
By Nomi Prins
November 30, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" - "TomDispatch"
- Fact: too many Republican candidates are clogging the political
scene. Perhaps what’s needed is an American Hunger Games to cut the
field to size. Each candidate could enter the wilderness with one
weapon and one undocumented worker and see who wins. Unlike in the
fictional Hunger Games for which contestants were plucked from 13
struggling, drab districts in the dystopian country of Panem, in the
GOP version, everyone already lives in the Capitol. (Okay, Marco
Rubio lives just outside it but is about to enter, and Donald Trump
like some gilded President Snow inhabits a universe all his own with
accommodations and ego to match.)
The six candidates chosen here (based on composite
polling) have remarkably similar, unoriginal, inequality-inducing,
trickle-down economic recommendations for the country: reduce taxes
(mostly on those who don’t need it), “grow” the economy like a
sprouting weed, balance the budget by cutting as yet not-delineated
social programs, overthrow Obama’s health-care legacy without
breaking up the insurance companies, and (yawn)... well, you get the
idea. If these six contenders were indeed Hunger Games tributes,
their skills in the American political wilderness would run this
way: Ben Carson inspires confusion; Marco Rubio conveys exaggerated
humility; Ted Cruz exudes scorn; Jeb Bush can obliterate his
personality at a whim; and Carly Fiorina’s sternness could slice
granite. This leaves Donald Trump, endowed with the ultimate skill:
self-promotion. As a tribute, he claims to believe that all our
problems stem from China and Mexico, as well as Muslim terrorists
and refugees (more or less the same thing, of course), and at
present he’s leading the Games.
When it comes to economic policy, it seems as if
none of them will ever make it out of the Capitol and into the
actual world of American reality. Like Hillary Clinton, blessed by
Wall Street’s
apparently undying gratitude for her 9/11 heroism, none of the
Republican contestants have
outlined a plan of any sort to deal with, no less break the
financial stronghold of the big banks on our world or reduce
disproportionate corporate power over the economy, though in a
crisis Cruz would “absolutely
not” bail them out again. Stumbling around in the wilderness,
Carson at least
offered a series of disjointed, semi-incomprehensible financial
suggestions during the last Republican “debate,” when asked why he
wouldn’t break banks up. "I don't want to go in and tear anybody
down,” he said. “I mean that doesn't help us, but what does help us
is to stop tinkering around the edges and fix the problem."
Rubio, already in top Hunger Games form, swears
that it’s recent regulations (not legacy elite decisions) that did
the dirty deed. “The government made [the banks] big by adding
thousands and thousands of pages of regulations," he
said of Dodd-Frank legislation (which doesn’t actually alter
Wall Street structurally in any way). In fact, in recent decades
every major power grab or consolidation in American business, from
banks to energy companies, resulted from bipartisan deregulation.
None of these big-money-backed candidates seem
particularly concerned that another economic crisis could ever
cripple the country, or have evidently even noticed that most
Americans have yet to experience the present “recovery.” None seem
to realize that when the Federal Reserve winds down its cheap money
policy and banks and companies are left to fend for themselves, more
economic hell could break loose in the style of the 2007-2008
meltdown. Jeb Bush recently
summed up the general 2016 Republican position on the economy in
a single what-me-worry-style sentence: “We shouldn't have another
financial crisis.” ‘Nuff said.
In the 2012 presidential election, Mitt Romney’s
chances dwindled after he
disparaged 47% of the country as so many leeches. Today’s Hunger
Gamers have learned from his experience. Optics spell opportunity,
so as a group they’re shuffling the usual Republican-brand tax cuts
for corporations and the wealthy in with selective recognition of
the broader population and promises to kill all loopholes in some
future utopian tax bill. None of them, of course, would consider
raising the minimum wage to put more money in the pockets of workers
before tax-time hits. Even old Henry Ford knew the power of wages
when, early in the last century, he strengthened his car empire by
doubling the then-prevailing minimum wage for his workers to $5
a day -- enough for them not only to save up and buy his Model-Ts,
but also boost productivity.
The present set of Hunger Gamers could invoke
Republican President Teddy Roosevelt’s trust-busting ire, or
President Dwight D. Eisenhower’s willingness to fund vast national
construction projects, or even (to reach into the distant past)
President Herbert Hoover’s initial attempts to pass what became,
under Democrat Franklin Delano Roosevelt, the 1933
Glass-Steagall Act that separated deposit-taking from
speculation at banks. But to be realistic, none of them belong to
the Republican Party as it once existed. They all live in an
American Panem and so feel no compunctions about promoting the idea
that corporations contributing ever less to the federal till would
Make America Great Again.
Now, let’s send those six candidates into that
wilderness, weapons in hand, one at a time, and while we’re at it,
examine their minor differences by checking out their campaign
websites to see what kind of games we can expect in a coming
Republican era of “good times.”
Ben Carson
If you look through the index of Ben Carson's
latest bestseller, A More Perfect Union, you won’t even
find the words “economy,” “banks,” or “Wall Street.” Instead, his
campaign slogan,
“Heal, Inspire, Revive,” could headline a yoga retreat. His position
as the Republican co-frontrunner or runner-up (depending on which
polls you look at) relies on his soft-spoken, non-politician
persona, not his vague economic ideas that flash by in a
chameleon-like fashion.
Yes, he was a brilliant neurosurgeon, but the
tenacity and skills required to become a gifted medical practitioner
have not translated well into presidential-style economic policies.
To the extent that he has a policy at all, it’s a shopworn version
of the twenty-first-century Republican usuals: ratifying a balanced
budget amendment to the Constitution “to restore fiscal
responsibility,” introducing a flat tax, not raising the minimum
wage, yada, yada, yada. In a Washington Post
op-ed last year, he recounted his mother’s days as a “domestic
in the homes of wealthy people who were generous to her” and would
slip young Carson and his brother “significant monetary incentives”
in return for good grades. One even loaned him a luxury convertible.
With such employers -- and the incredibly rich are a well-known
generous bunch, at least when it comes to
supporting Republican presidential candidates (just 158 families
have contributed more than half the money to this election so far,
mostly to Republicans) -- who needs a government-declared minimum
wage?
Regarding taxes, Carson
considers the 74,000-page tax code “an abomination.” And who
would argue otherwise? But like his various opponents, he's not
about to point out that it was largely crafted by the
representatives of mega-corporations, not Wal-Mart workers at
meet-ups with senators. He’s for a
flat tax of 10% with
no exemptions for the poor, based on biblical economics 101.
Maybe people who don’t produce bumper crops should just pray for a
better lot.
He would conveniently
cut the official corporate tax rate from
35% (the average effective tax rate is
27.9% but the biggest, brightest companies don’t even approach
that amount) to between 15% and 20%, the definition of corporate
manna from heaven. He would also allow companies to bring their
foreign profits back to the U.S. completely tax-free if they would
even... pretty, pretty please... consider allocating 10% of them to
“finance enterprise zones” in major cities. And so it goes in
Carsonland.
Best bet on his campaign website:
A $25
bumper sticker that says #IAMACHRISTIAN, proof that he’s eager
to channel his inner evangelical Katniss.
Donald Trump
Trump actually
brought up President Dwight Eisenhower recently, but only for
Operation Wetback, his grim Mexican immigrant deportation program.
No I-like-Ike mention was made of his funding of the interstate
highway system or the way he strengthened banking regulations.
The Donald lists
five core positions on his site, including the two economic
pillars of his campaign: “U.S.-China trade reform” and “tax reform,”
both of which would, of course, “make America great again.” This may
already sound a bit repetitively familiar to you, but he wants to
reduce the corporate tax rate to 15% because it “would be 10
percentage points below China’s and 20 points below our current
burdensome rate that pushes companies and jobs offshore.” Given
that our biggest companies already pay far less than that
“burdensome” rate, can there be any question that lowering it
further would produce more generous CEOs and slay dreaded China at
the same time?
Like President Snow, Trump would start
aggressively and only get more so, economically speaking. He would
“attack” the national debt and deficit by eliminating government
waste, fraud, and abuse, and “grow” the economy xenophobically by
doing in local Mexicans and distant Chinese, and all of this cutting
and slashing would, like a Chia Pet, make the economy sprout even as
tax revenues were savaged. Or, even if it isn’t one of his five
core positions, he could pull a genuine Snow and get rid of
old-fashioned-style government, leaving Americans officially
beholden to an oligarch.
In another piece of (black) magic, his campaign
website assures readers that cutting the deficit and reducing our
debt would also stop China from “blackmail[ing] us with our own
Treasury bonds.” No matter that China actually lent us money to run
our government and bolster our financial system, and that a
thank-you note might be in order (on paper made in China, of
course).
When it comes to tax reform, Trump’s
“populist” program would remove 75 million households from the
income tax rolls and provide them, so he claims, with a simple
one-page form to send the IRS, saying “I win.” Though he would cut
the current seven tax brackets to four -- 0%, 10%, 20%, and 25% --
it’s his 15% corporate tax rate that trumps the field. Rubio
would only chop it to 25%, Bush to 20%, Cruz to 16%, and
Carson... who knows? Various estimates suggest that Trump’s plan
would lead to a
staggering federal revenue loss (so lucky for us that, in a
Trump presidency, the rich would undoubtedly be so grateful that
their generosity would soar beyond imagining). The nonpartisan
Citizens for Tax Justice computed the cost of his plan at $12
trillion over 10 years. So don’t expect any Eisenhower-esque
national building campaigns (other than that “beautiful” wall on the
Mexican border).
Best gimmick on his campaign website:
A $15 Trump dog sweater
modeled by the saddest damn wiener dog ever. Perhaps its mother
was a deported Chihuahua.
Marco Rubio
Rubio’s slogan “a new American century” couldn’t
be grander, perhaps to compensate for the lackluster version of
economic policy at his campaign website. It’s certainly not the
sort of thing you’d expect from someone aspiring to be president of
the world’s largest economy. Despite that, rest assured that he’s
had economics and success on his mind 24/7. After all, Goldman
Sachs is now his
top contributor and his super PACs are on a run, too, including
the rap-inspired “Baby Got Pac”
just launched by multimillionaire John Jordan.
And in true Hunger Games fashion -- when the
“odds” head in a tribute’s favor, the patrons and gifts begin
rolling in -- Rubio just bagged Republican mega-donor billionaire
Frank VanderSloot. Mitt Romney’s former national finance
co-chairman, VanderSloot joins a growing roster of Rubio
billionaires, including hedge-fund moguls Paul Singer and Cliff
Asness.
“Marco Rubio is the brightest and most capable
candidate," wrote VanderSloot of his new political buddy. Of the
others he and his brain trust considered, he
added, "Jeb simply does not have the leadership skills necessary
to unite the people behind him"; Carson lacks “the international
knowledge or skill set"; Cruz and Trump are “simply not electable in
a general election" (no billionaire-envy there); and Fiorina, his
second choice, “simply isn’t resonating with the voters.”
Rubio’s
tax plan, the “cornerstone” of his economic policy, would -- you
won’t be surprised to learn -- reduce the number of tax brackets
from seven to three and eliminate taxes in ways particularly
beneficial to the billionaire (especially hedge-fund billionaire)
class, including the estate tax and taxes on capital gains and
dividends. For the broad population, Rubio includes family tax cuts.
According to an analysis by
the Tax Policy Center, his plan would be a bargain compared to
Trump’s, costing federal government coffers a mere $2.4 trillion or
more in receipts over the next decade. As a byproduct, his program
is essentially guaranteed to spark a new round of financial
speculation, but don’t for a second let the 2007-2008 meltdown cross
your mind since, as every Republican knows, with a Marco Rubio,
Donald Trump, or Ben Carson in the Oval Office that can’t happen.
Best gimmick on his campaign website:
You can “fall into campaign season” by ordering
a “Marco
Polo” made-in-the-USA shirt for $48 in patriotic red, white, or
blue naturally! For a mere $500 extra, you can personally have the
honor of buying Rubio a “plane
ticket” (perhaps to meet and greet his next billionaire).
Ted Cruz
The Cruz campaign website offers a hodge-podge of
semi-incoherent economic salesmanship. His tax plan, or what he
likes to call (without the slightest justification) the “next
American revolution,” promises to “reignite growth in our economy.”
His “simple flat tax” (yep, another of those!) would abolish the
Internal Revenue Service as well. Personal income tax brackets
would go from seven to... count ‘em!... one at a 10% rate across the
board and the corporate income tax would be replaced by a flat tax
of 16%. And it should be taken for granted that the American economy
would soar into the stratosphere!
Cruz’s tax code would be so “simple with a
capital-S” that it would make Donald Trump’s look complicated. A
postcard or phone app would suffice for individual and family
filings. There would be no tax on profits earned abroad and it
almost goes without saying that Obamacare taxes would die a
strangulated death. Loopholes for businesses would apparently go,
too.
Cruz claims his
simple
flat tax will elevate the gross domestic product, increase wages
by 12.2%, create nearly five million new jobs, and undoubtedly fill
the world with unicorns. It would also wipe out between
$768 billion and $3.6 trillion in federal tax receipts over
10 years.
Best gimmick on his campaign website:
For $55 you can get a bad-boy
poster of Cruz sporting a Sons of Anarchy look (tattoos,
cigarette in mouth, etc.) captioned “Blacklisted and Loving It.”
Jeb Bush
Jeb! has by far the sleekest web page. He and his
donor entourage took the “presidential concept” seriously with a
look that seems to have been stolen directly from “the Capitol” in
the Hunger Games.
Its
economic section excoriates the tax code for being “rigged with
multiple carve-outs for favored industries.” He blasts Obama’s
economic policies for leading to “low growth, crony capitalism, and
easy debt.” Yet, under Jeb’s governorship, Florida's debt
escalated from $15 billion to more than $23 billion. After his
term, the housing-bubble that had inflated the state’s coffers burst
big time, and Florida's economy
under-performed much of the country during the financial crisis.
While homeowners statewide went underwater, he
landed a multi-million dollar consultancy gig with... gulp!...
Lehman Brothers.
By now, you won’t be shocked to learn that Bush’s
plan would cut tax brackets from seven to three: 28%, 25% and 10%,
and that he would cut the corporate tax rate from 35% to 20%, five
points below China’s. (These days, if you’re a Republican, you’ve
got to stick it to China.)
While Jeb would not rein in Wall Street (for all
the obvious and already
well-documented reasons), right now it looks as if he’s not
going to have a chance to not rein in anything. While his PR team
maintains “Jeb can fix it,” invigorating his wilting campaign will
require more than a bow and arrow and a mockingbird.
Best gimmick on his campaign web page:
“The Guaca Bowle” for
$75 because who doesn’t need one? (Bush family guac recipe not
included.)
Carly Fiorina
Fiorina’s
web page doesn’t offer a lot of economic anything. It’s more
like a personality infomercial. For her official positions, you need
to watch video clips of her TV appearances from CBS This Morning
to late night talk shows and -- if you’re starting to get bored --
just imagine Stanley Tucci as Hunger Games host of festivities
Caesar Flickerman narrating.
Fiorina calls for “zero-based budgeting” because
“zero” sounds so much cleverer than “balanced” and
touts ad nauseam a three-page tax plan (perhaps the current one
in a microscopic font, since we don’t actually know the details).
The repetition of simple concepts to the masses seems to be her
modus operandi.
Best gimmick on the Carly for America Super
PAC website: For only $26 you can get a “Hillary
Who?” infant one-piece, the perfect gift for any Republican
baby.
How Corporations Really Pay Taxes
Despite the prominence of tax cuts in the policies
of the top six Republican candidates, even the venerable Brookings
Institution
found that they have a minimal effect on economic growth. In
addition, when you consider all the promised corporate cuts, you
should know that corporations already don’t contribute much.
According to Citizens for
Tax Justice, between 2008 and 2012, 26 of the 288 Fortune 500 firms
(consistently profitable in those years) managed to pay nothing,
nada, zero in federal income tax. The 288 firms collectively
paid an effective federal income tax rate of 19.4%, and a third of
them paid an effective rate of less than 10%. Five companies --
Wells Fargo, AT&T, IBM, General Electric, and Verizon -- also bagged
over $77 billion of the $364 billion in tax breaks doled out in
those years. Extra jobs didn't follow. Think of this crew as the
real winners of the American Hunger Games in this period.
For 2014, for instance, Goldman Sachs avoided
forking over federal income taxes on almost half of its
$6.8 billion in U.S. profits, paying an effective tax rate of
18.6%. Between 2010 and 2012, due to tax breaks associated with
executive pay, Fortune 500 companies saved an extra
$27 billion in federal and state taxes. That’s a lot of dosh to
use for Super PAC support.
In 2012, the Democrats blasted candidate Mitt
Romney’s tax plan as a giveaway to the rich. This time around, our
six tributes-cum-candidates are taking no such chances. They’re
making sure to throw crumbs to the middle and working classes, even
as they offer more caviar to the wealthy and corporations. Depending
on the candidate and plan, the overall loss of national revenue will
range from an estimated $1.6 trillion (even factoring in growth that
may never happen) to $12 trillion, but will be a
stunning amount.
Perhaps with such a field of candidates, the
classic Hunger Games line will need to be adapted: “Let the games
begin and may the oddity of it all be ever in your favor.”
Certainly, there has never been a stranger or more unsettling
Republican campaign for the presidential nomination or one more
filled with economic balderdash and showmanship. Of course, at some
point in 2016, we’ll be at that moment when President Snow says to
Katniss Everdeen, "Make no mistake, the game is coming to its end."
One of these candidates or a rival Democrat will actually enter the
Oval Office and when that happens, both parties will be left with
guilt on their hands and all the promises that will have to be
fulfilled to repay their super-rich supporters (Bernie aside). And
that, of course, is when the real Hunger Games are likely to begin
for most Americans. Those of us in the outer districts can but hope
for revolution.
Nomi Prins, a
TomDispatch regular, is the author of six books, a
speaker, and a distinguished senior fellow at the non-partisan
public policy institute Demos. Her most recent book is All
the Presidents' Bankers: The Hidden Alliances That Drive American
Power (Nation Books). She is a former
Wall Street executive. Special thanks go to researcher Craig Wilson
for his superb work on this piece.
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Copyright 2015 Nomi Prins