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- <text id=92TT0446>
- <title>
- Mar. 02, 1992: The Political Interest
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
- Mar. 02, 1992 The Angry Voter
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- NATION, Page 25
- THE POLITICAL INTEREST
- Who Has the Best Plan for Fixing the Economy?
- </hdr><body>
- <p>By Michael Kramer
- </p>
- <p> Two guys with booklets itching for a fight. That's what
- it's come down to. Two candidates who have specific ideas for
- fixing an economy both describe as near collapse and who view
- each other's prescriptions as deficient. "At some point," says
- Paul Tsongas, "we're going to have to go head to head on
- economics." The sooner the better, says Bill Clinton.
- </p>
- <p> Well, if it's a debate they want, let it begin.
- </p>
- <p> Note first that Clinton and Tsongas are new-breed
- Democrats. As they seek to craft a different relationship
- between government and the private economy, they challenge their
- party's traditional orthodoxy. In some ways (and especially when
- Tsongas touts his unabashed probusiness views), they sound like
- moderate Republicans, that nearly extinct species whose nostrums
- George Bush once championed. Tsongas enjoys a reputation as a
- hard-nosed economic truth teller, largely because he never tires
- of self-righteously describing himself in those terms. Clinton,
- on the other hand, suffers from what Mario Cuomo calls the
- "dumb-blond syndrome": If you're good-looking, you can't be
- smart. In fact, though, if deep-think and specifics attract you,
- Clinton is the more forceful and articulate.
- </p>
- <p> If you read their books, study their speeches and consider
- their extemporaneous remarks, Tsongas most often delivers topic
- sentences, while Clinton fills in the details. Tsongas' writings
- are full of "we should consider this" and "we should think about
- that," and the latest addendum to his 85-page booklet, A Call
- to Economic Arms, casually borrows some of Clinton's stronger
- proposals--but only, it seems, for political cover, since
- Tsongas' transparent me-tooism is only sporadically fleshed out.
- On some matters, however, like the wisdom of a middle-class tax
- cut (which Tsongas opposes and Clinton supports) and the idea
- of adjusting entitlement-program payments like Social Security
- to a person's income (which Tsongas is more willing to
- consider), Tsongas is clearly the more courageous.
- </p>
- <p> TAX CUTS. The sexiest difference between the two men's
- views involves a tax cut for the middle class. Clinton favors
- a revenue-neutral reduction in rates: the 15% tax rate would
- fall to 13.5%, the 28% rate to 26.5%. The net loss in Treasury
- receipts, about $30 billion, would be recaptured by raising the
- top income tax rate to 38% on earnings above $200,000 a year.
- On average, a middle-class family would gain about $350 a year,
- a "paltry" 97 cents a day, says Tsongas, who decries Clinton's
- plan as a "pandering, poll-driven gimmick" that "won't create
- jobs or help our economy."
- </p>
- <p> For a brief time (and then only in private), Clinton
- conceded Tsongas' critique. He admitted that his plan was mostly
- symbolic. Political exigencies, he explained, required his
- signaling sympathy for the economically stressed. For public
- consumption, a rationale beyond sympathy is needed. So with a
- straight face and a fair amount of feigned indignation, Clinton
- regularly swipes at those who pooh-pooh his idea. "That $350 a
- year may not sound like much," says Clinton, "but for many, it's
- a month's mortgage payment--and that's nothing to sneeze at."
- Suffice it to say that in New Hampshire, where the economy has
- moved from recession to depression, most Democratic voters
- seemed to side with Tsongas.
- </p>
- <p> INVESTMENT. Tsongas' aversion to a tax cut, his opposition
- to an increased tax exemption for children (which Clinton
- favors) and his proposal for a yearly 5 cents-per-gal.
- gasoline-tax increase (which Clinton opposes) illustrate the
- considerable philosophical gulf between the two candidates.
- </p>
- <p> Much of what Tsongas believes and proposes smacks of
- trickle-down economics. "My job as President," he says, "will
- be to grow companies." Only later "will I turn my attention to
- things like tax cuts." Tsongas' neo-Republican view sees the
- cost of capital as the crucial force in economic growth. To
- lower these costs and thus induce investment, he would use the
- powers of government to cut the tax bite on venture capital. But
- this direction has been tried before with little success. From
- the mid-1970s until the 1986 tax-reform act took effect, the tax
- burden on capital was reduced, but the rate of growth of
- investment during those years was half of what it was in the
- 1950s and 1960s.
- </p>
- <p> It should be clear by now that the post-tax cost of
- capital has relatively little influence on both the overall
- level of investment and the uses of invested funds. In fact, the
- greatest influence on investment is the prospect for pretax
- returns. The key questions concern how good a new idea is, how
- much of a market there is for a particular product and how
- productively it can be created. The issue--as Clinton
- understands far better than Tsongas--is how to make the entire
- economy more productive, not how the tax code can be jiggered
- to induce the wealthy to buy stocks instead of yachts. Both men,
- by the way, favor a capital-gains tax cut, but Clinton would
- target his break toward the creation of new businesses, while
- Tsongas' cut would apply primarily to securities purchases.
- </p>
- <p> INDUSTRIAL POLICY. Although he usually avoids the term on
- the stump, Tsongas favors a national industrial policy, and his
- campaign literature makes his preference clear. "American
- companies need the United States Government as a full partner
- if they are to have any hope of competing internationally," he
- says in A Call to Economic Arms. "That means an industrial
- policy." Tsongas traces his affinity for government involvement
- in the private sector to the 1979 Chrysler bailout. He applauds
- his own leadership on the issue, but the driving force was
- really Senator Richard Lugar, an Indiana Republican. "Tsongas
- was important to show bipartisan support," says Roger Altman,
- the former Assistant Treasury Secretary in charge of the Carter
- Administration's effort to save Chrysler. "But it was Lugar who
- really made the deal fly by insisting on some fairly impressive
- union givebacks and other concessions."
- </p>
- <p> One area particularly in which Tsongas would have the
- government take a leading role is in the creation of nuclear
- power plants. He wants the U.S. to become energy independent,
- and he views nuclear power as a crucial part of the mix.
- Adopting the nuclear option may accommodate an economic truth,
- but Tsongas has been quick to recognize a different, political
- truism: the fact that many Democratic voters abhor nuclear
- power. His speeches these days downplay nuclear's role in
- achieving energy independence, but on paper Tsongas notes that
- America's 112 nuclear plants produced the energy to cut the U.S.
- oil-import bill by $4.7 billion in 1989. On the basis of these
- figures, substituting nuclear power completely for oil imports
- would require more than 1,000 new nuclear plants. Even that
- estimate is low, since Tsongas calls for building
- 300-MW-to-500-MW plants rather than the current 1,200-MW models.
- </p>
- <p> Tsongas' true industrial-policy ambitions are even larger.
- He is positively intrigued by the idea that the government
- identify a broad range of economic winners, who then would be
- helped with tax breaks and investment assistance. Few economists
- have much faith in the government's ability to predict strong
- economic performers, and when it comes to health care, even
- Tsongas agrees. In knocking Bob Kerrey's national
- health-insurance scheme, Tsongas says, "If anyone thinks the
- words government and efficiency belong in the same sentence, we
- have counseling available." There's an inconsistency here, of
- course, but Tsongas ignores it.
- </p>
- <p> ANTITRUST. Both Tsongas and Clinton are ardent free
- traders, but only Tsongas sees the antitrust laws as inhibiting
- the nation's ability to compete abroad. "Current antitrust
- laws," he says, "prevent American companies from joint venturing
- in almost any area, including such critical ones as research and
- development." On this, Tsongas is just dead wrong. Even the
- American Bar Association's antitrust contingent, which is heavy
- with attorneys who represent manufacturing clients, and which
- therefore supports the fewest obstacles to unfettered business
- enterprise, has concluded that the law is fine as it stands.
- "He's just plain misinformed," says Stephen Axinn, one of the
- nation's leading antitrust lawyers. "Since 1984 there have been
- virtually no impediments to R. and D. joint ventures. What's
- more, the current state of play is good public policy. A
- wholesale wiping out of the review process for prospective joint
- ventures, which Tsongas wants, might lead to a better ability
- to compete globally, but it could also cause skyrocketing prices
- at home and layoffs as companies combine. The only responsible
- way to approach joint ventures is on a case-by-case basis, and
- that's proceeding very well now."
- </p>
- <p> ENTITLEMENTS. Significant increases in capital will be
- possible only when the deficit is controlled, a difficult task
- when the costs of entitlement programs continue to spiral. To
- his credit, Tsongas has flirted with capping cost-of-living
- adjustments at 1% below the inflation rate, and he seconds
- Bush's desire for a greater contribution to Medicare from those
- who earn more than $125,000 a year. He has backed off an earlier
- call to means-test Social Security, an idea that views as folly
- the right of rich and poor to draw equal retirement stipends.
- But at least Tsongas is talking about the problem. Clinton has
- run away. At a dinner in New York City a year ago, Clinton
- responsibly endorsed Bush's Medicare plan. Since then, however,
- he's been mum.
- </p>
- <p> EDUCATION AND JOBS. While Tsongas worries about the cost
- of capital, Clinton's focus is on human resources. His
- coherent, systematic approach to improving education at all
- levels revolves around apprenticeship programs for those who
- choose not to attend college and a universal loan program that
- would guarantee a college education to all who want one, in
- return for an extended repayment schedule or a period of
- national service. Clinton has also developed a worker-retraining
- plan that would force companies to spend equally for this
- purpose. Current worker-training schemes are virtually useless,
- he notes correctly. "Roughly 70% of corporate training expenses
- serve only 10% of employees," explains Rob Shapiro of the
- Progressive Policy Institute, a centrist think tank that is
- advising Clinton. "Companies are loath to train lower-rung
- employees for fear they'll leave for other jobs once their skill
- levels improve. Compelling all U.S. corporations to spend
- similarly on training will help."
- </p>
- <p> Astutely recognizing smart ideas when he sees them,
- Tsongas has lately bowed to these needs as well, but only with
- bland, content-free bromides. His recognition of the skills gap,
- for example, is currently contained in just half a sentence:
- "Americans...must also receive continuing education and
- training to keep up with the latest technologies."
- </p>
- <p> Marry Tsongas' emphasis on capital formation with
- Clinton's concern for human capital, and voters could have a
- compelling alternative to the policies George Bush labeled
- "voodoo economics" before he adopted them as Ronald Reagan's
- 1980 running mate. All that's needed now is for Tsongas and
- Clinton to actually engage in the debate they profess to crave--that and two open minds.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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