The chart is based on Economic models. How exactly can you present a factual chart saying that you lost (or gained) so much revenue from the tax cuts, because we have no definite way of knowing what revenues would have been without the tax cuts. Therefore you use Economic models. The paper points out the difficulties in estimating the effect of tax cuts. .
Cutting taxes can increase government revenue, or decrease it. As you point out, other factors can increase revenues. However, the Economy is such a complex beast you can't say that all the tax cuts are responsible for increasing the government revenue afterwards. That is unless you're ready to present the growth accounting data to me that I asked for earlier in this thread. .
No, you're misunderstanding. It depends on what you mean by short run. Over the short run is when we have the benefits of the tax cuts. Over time the economy adjusts to them and in the long term they are not beneficial. .
HA ! Above you state that the models CANNOT accurately predict these things, then you state that the very same model shows that long term reduction in revenues will occur, as though its fact. So, do you accept that your model CAN or CANNOT make reasonably accurate predictions?
You're not seeing the big picture. Tax cuts decrease government revenue. This sends us into larger deficit. That is synonymous with greatly decreasing public savings, which hurts our economy in the long run according to the Solow Model. All of this is rather established economics, and I believe taught in Econ 101. It is clear that the tax cuts are sending a negative effect towards our long term growth by lowering the savings rate. The study then mentions two sources of investment which could possibly offset the decrease in the savings rate. It is unequivocal that the tax cuts are sending a negative effect towards our economy. If there was foreign borrowing and we didn't have the tax cuts, then our economy would do even better long term due to a higher savings rate. .
Again, you contradict yourself by claiming, or at least sound like, your model is stating facts, not predictions.
Since we have had one of the best, if not the best, economic engines currently driving our country, which is following the tax cuts, how can you state the tax cuts are sending a negative effect on our economy?
Another thing you are doing is strange. You continue to accept the models PREDICTING long term loses in revenue, but then you reject what is our most accurate indicator of the effects: what did the economy do following the cuts.
"However, the numbers, crunched by Heritage's Brian Riedl, show otherwise (see chart below). In 1980, the last year before the tax cuts, tax revenues were $956 billion (in constant 1996 dollars).
Revenues exceeded that 1980 level in eight of the next 10 years. Annual revenues over the next decade averaged $102 billion above their 1980 level (in constant 1996 dollars)."
FROM THE CATO INSTITUTE:
http://www.cato.org/pubs/tbb/tbb-0302-13.pdf
You're not taking into account the fact that you have to get elected, and get funding from all of these pro-funding lobbyists in order to do that.
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Its a pure hypothetica. Besides we were discussing the difficulties, or lack of, of cutting spending, NOT GETTING ELECTED. You do this often, change the focus of the subject.
It estimates GDP increase in the short run, not revenue.
Basically the same thing.
Your model has a lot of major problems besides. In one paragraph it states, "...capital investment can only be financed through foreign borrowing or national savings."
NOT true. How about financing it through PROFITS, which have increased due to tax cuts.
Lastly, an article written by a person who believes tax cuts decrease tax revenues was published. His paper is out and out full of lies. I wonder why?
http://www.huppi.com/kangaroo/L-taxcollections.htm