September 20, 2011 8:39 AM

GOP adviser: "Buffett tax" won't help jobless

By
David Morgan
(CBS News) 

A former director of the Congressional Budget Office and economic adviser to John McCain's 2008 presidential campaign said Tuesday that President Obama's tax-and-spending proposals (including a tax on the wealthiest Americans, the so-called "Buffett rule") won't help the unemployed.

On Monday the president described his proposal to cut $3.6 trillion from the deficit over the next 10 years - half of that amount coming from tax increases on the wealthy, including a new tax on the wealthy named after billionaire Warren Buffett (who has said it's not fair that his tax rate is lower than his secretary's), reports CBS News chief White House correspondent Bill Plante.

House Speaker John Boehner accused the president of divisiveness: "I don't believe that class warfare is leadership," he said. "We could get into this 'tax the rich, tax the rich,' but that is not, that's not the basis for America. And it's not going to get our economy going again and it's not going to put people back to work."

The president has dismissed the Republicans' charges: "This is not class warfare; it's math," he said.

Douglas Holtz-Eakin, president of American Action Forum, a conservative policy forum, said on CBS' "The Early Show" that the president's proposal falls short, and that he is not evincing leadership.

"I think it misses in three ways," Holtz-Eakin told anchor Erica Hill. "First of all, a lot of the spending reductions are the presumed roll-down of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. That's going to happen, anyway, so that's not really a new proposal and he's counting it anyway.

"Second is on the tax front. The president has been quite eloquent about the need for tax reform, and those words are the right words. But the proposals he's put out - proposals for more targeted tax benefits, more temporary tax breaks, the 'Buffett rule' - are all things that complicate the tax code and move us away from tax reform. It would be nice to see proposals that matched to his words.

"But the real failing of this plan is it doesn't take on in a serious way the future growth in the entitlement programs," Holtz-Eakin said.

He characterized entitlements programs as "broken right now. Social Security is running red ink, Medicare is borrowing $280 billion a year from the general Treasury. Medicaid is entirely deficit-financed. We need a social safety net that is durable for the future. We can't afford the red ink that those programs are generating. And the president took a pass on fixing them in any substantial way. His proposals on Medicare are all waste, fraud and abuse, and we know that that is not what it takes."

[According to the most recent Treasury Statement dated September 15, 2011, to date this fiscal year the federal government borrowed $247.9 billion to cover shortfalls in operating expenses for ALL government programs, not just Medicare. Medicaid is jointly funded by the federal government and the states.]

Holtz-Eakin said, "At this point in our history, we need the leadership on the big problems, and that is the potential for a debt crisis and those entitlement programs."

When asked by Hill if he thought the president's proposal for a tax on millionaires amounted to class warfare, Holtz-Eakin replied, "I don't know what class warfare is. It's like, fairness is in the eye of the beholder. But I know as a matter of the tax policy necessary to raise the revenue to pay the government's bills and have this economy grow, these proposals don't take us there.

"There's nothing about the 'Buffett tax' that is going to solve the biggest unfairness we face, which is the gap between those who have a job and not who do not."

Also appearing on "The Early Show" was University of Chicago professor and former chairman of President Obama's Council of Economic Advisers Austan Goolsbee. He said that while he expected tax increases to kick in further down the road, the president's plan had the required balance of spending cuts and revenue increases.

"From what I read, the essence of the thing was trying to be balanced, that you would have some spending cuts, you would cut discretionary spending, you would cut defense, you would cut entitlements and you'd raise some revenue," Goolsbee said. He noted that tax rates for very high-income Americans "is the lowest it's been in something like 60 years."

[According to a 2007 study by economists Thomas Piketty and Emmanual Saez, federal income tax rates for the wealthiest percentile of Americans since 1960 have continually dropped (except for a blip during the Clinton administration); they are about half what they were in 1960.]

"I do think that a balanced approach is better than a one-sided approach" of just spending cuts, he added.

© 2011 CBS Interactive Inc.. All Rights Reserved.
  • David Morgan

    David Morgan is a senior editor at CBSNews.com and cbssundaymorning.com.

Add a Comment See all 35 Comments
by freedom8246 September 30, 2011 2:21 PM EDT
Taxes lets see thats what those in Washington depend on to keep a roo over thier families heads. Now to assit them with thier tax problems. Maybe they need to take the advice of the Homeless People. They have no job thefore they pay no taxes. They have no personal property left. Because They dont need utilities, they dont need to pay rent, plus they still have have health care and can go to a non forpofitt hospital. So Instead of Worry about whos going to pay back all these tax dollars. Maybe those In Washington
need to pass a law making it illegal to be homeless.

Dale Bennington
Florida
1 352 340 5852
Reply to this comment
by noloyalisti September 28, 2011 5:29 PM EDT
What do you expect a corporate shill Government of Pigs Party advisor to say. Whatever his shortsighted, empty headed brain wants to say. How many more times do we need to be reminded of this disastrous obsolete Republicon Party that has no plans and no shame.
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by midwest_mind September 26, 2011 1:37 PM EDT
This is just one more example of the GOP having no idea of what to do except keep throwing money at the rich. I would love to see them come up with an idea other than cut all spending and give more money to the rich (which they laughingly call "job creators"!)
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by raflin1 September 28, 2011 10:27 AM EDT
Earth to GOP "Adviser":

The point of the tex is NOT about creating jobs dumbo. The POINT is about helping to bring in badly needed revenue and to help reduce the deficit. Try getting a clue.
by noloyalisti September 28, 2011 5:27 PM EDT
The fact is that raising taxes CREATES jobs. It worked during Clinton's time quite well. It is because it provides incentive for the rich to reinvest in the company, otherwise the money will be taxed. Right now they just rape and pillage and suck all the money out.
by petesis September 24, 2011 12:02 PM EDT
It will help the deficit they were crying about last month. Just more bait and switch from the party of the rich complaining about class warfare and taxes as they cut programs for the poor and protect the interests of major corporations and the wealthiest.
Reply to this comment
by Hala_c September 22, 2011 8:51 AM EDT
We all labor hard for our money and are taxed at every turn but our money doesn't work as hard for the money it earns and the income our money earns is taxed at a paltry rate. What's wrong with this picture?
I understand the argument that money already earned through hard work and now invested was taxed at the standard income rate when it was earned but for people to cry, that to tax the income their money earns at the same rate as the income they earn is tantamount to double taxation, is a crock. Do these people not understand that when they pay sales taxes that they are paying taxes to spend money that they already paid taxes on when they earned it with their hard work?
Yes, when we invest I'm taking risks but we do have options to mitigate that risk... they're called T-Bills. Even when the economy tanks the smart people flock to the security (AA+ that is) they know and trust. The night that the S&P downgraded the U.S. I said they would go for the security of T-Bills and that's exactly what happened. The world didn't end.
As for those that scream that increasing taxes on capital gains will kill investment, what are they going to do if they don't invest their money? Are they really going to bury it in Mason jars in their back yards? Somehow I doubt that. Sure they could put their money in foreign markets, but considering those foreign markets are highly dependent on the stability of the U.S. economy... do I really have to spell it out? Maybe they can take their money to Europe's market. The only thing I can say to that though is good luck with Greece!
When the economy is driven off the cliff and the dollar is worth nothing the paying field won't exactly be leveled but it will be a hell of a lot closer. So to the wealthy that don't want to pay an equal share I ask, would you like to join the rest of America in poverty? Pay more taxes or we can go third world.
Reply to this comment
by aldrich617 September 21, 2011 9:58 PM EDT
Now that capitalism has gone into self-destruct mode, very heavy
taxation of the rich is about the only thing that might turn
the situation around. The catch is that the rich have to understand
not only that it is the right thing to do, allow it to happen, and have faith that in the end our society as a whole will be better off, but also that, counter-intuitively, they may actually end up richer than they are now.

Since this higher understanding of the workings of the world is unlikely to occur anytime soon perhaps it is time to go retro.
An example of this type of policy would be to ban all ATM's
and all online banking to force the hiring of actual people
to do some necessary work. This might be the beginning of
a new Luddite-style movement to repair the damage done to the
fragile ecology of the economy wrought by AUTOMATION - eater
of jobs and souls - and to tear down the God of Efficiency
and replace it with a new people-friendly paradigm.
Reply to this comment
by realist51 September 20, 2011 12:17 PM EDT
So what is the point? tax increases don't create jobs? no kidding! However they do increase the governments revenues which is good. We have seen that tax cuts and deficit spending have brought our country to the brink of collapse. We've seen free trade policies and financial deregulation collapse our economy. I seen wealthy people on here post that they are the saviors of our economy and yet unemployment is at 9%. I seen in the past the worlds greatest nation fight two wars go to the moon and had an average unemployment rate of 4.7% fully funded social security and medicare. the passing of civil rights laws. true at a time when there was turmoil in the country and the world. and all of this was done with tax rates that exceeded 70% on the nations wealthy. It seems that to many people FAIL to realize that we need to increase the revenues along with cuts in spending. Once the paper work is balanced out then tax rates can then be lowered. To think that if the initial bush tax cuts were never implemented we would have had zero debt by 2014. If too taxes had been increase during a time of war to pay for the now ten years middle east wars they may have not lasted this long nor cost our nation so much. S whats it going to be endless finger pointing or all of us sucking it up and being a nation again? I'm for letting all the bush tax cuts expire. And end the ten years middle east wars (2.5 billion a week)I'm also for letting the payroll tax expire(we need to replenish S.S.) also let the cap be removed from it and if we have to means test and increase the age limit according to job history. The medicare tax should also be increased to cover those expenses too. Real world solutions to the problems.
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by iamproteus September 21, 2011 5:22 AM EDT
realist51, you make some very good points. I only wish you would be more careful with your punctuation and grammar so it's a bit easier to understand. I mean no disrespect.
by CaptainSmollett September 20, 2011 11:25 AM EDT
Social Security is not an entitlement program. I (and my employers) paid more into that than I'll ever get out.
Reply to this comment
by chevyhotrod September 20, 2011 11:37 AM EDT
Maybe you should look into how SS was created in the first place?
by ToolMangler1 September 21, 2011 8:32 PM EDT
You were never intended to get back everything you paid in, Because there are many that had very little to pay in but still needed the help it provided all of those without money..
by Polythene_Pam September 20, 2011 11:20 AM EDT
If it helps to balance the budget, does it matter if it *also* creates (or doesn't create) jobs?

Does it have to do *everything*?
Reply to this comment
by pjchooch September 20, 2011 11:18 AM EDT
THERE IS NO EVIDENCE TO SUPPORT THE REPUBLICANS' ARGUMENT, THAT TAXES HURT JOB CREATION. NONE. AT ALL.

In fact, all the evidence points to the opposite. 1990's had higher taxes and lots of job creation. The 2000's had lower taxes and no job creation (yes, NO job creation).
Reply to this comment
by Excalibrationist September 20, 2011 11:41 AM EDT
Learn to read.
Better yet
....learn to read and comprehend!
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