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- <text id=91TT2617>
- <title>
- Nov. 25, 1991: Money Angles
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Nov. 25, 1991 10 Ways to Cure The Health Care Mess
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- BUSINESS, Page 67
- MONEY ANGLES
- What George--and You--Should Do Next
- </hdr><body>
- <p>By Andrew Tobias
- </p>
- <p> It's all falling into place: the demise of communism, the
- lowering of trade barriers, the wide availability of fat-free
- desserts--even progress in South Africa, lower interest rates
- and a glimmer of hope for Middle East peace. Can a drop in
- homelessness and law-school enrollments be far behind? It's
- almost as if everything is being tidied up for 2000, the new
- millennium.
- </p>
- <p> And yet I'm nervous. We're forecasting a $350 billion
- deficit (so forget a big tax break) and close to 7% unemployment
- (so we need one). Consumer confidence is down, bank failures
- are up, and a record 10% of us are on food stamps. We have too
- many good real estate agents ("This is the bedroom; this is the
- bathroom"), not enough good teachers or nurses. Too many kids
- with guns, too few with fathers.
- </p>
- <p> The Republican solution is threefold:
- </p>
- <p>-- Low interest rates, which ease the strain on debt-heavy
- companies and may--or may not--stimulate borrowing (but also
- reduce interest income).
- </p>
- <p>-- "Points of light," which are easily ridiculed but
- should not be. Government can't solve all problems. Private
- volunteer efforts really are part of the solution.
- </p>
- <p>-- And--seemingly the centerpiece--another bonanza for
- the rich: an across-the-board cut in the capital-gains tax.
- </p>
- <p> Apart from the equity of it (the rich have already had
- their top tax bracket cut from 70% in 1980 to an effective 34%
- today), you have to wonder whether a broad capital-gains tax cut
- would really serve to jump-start the economy. Wouldn't it loose
- an awful lot of pent-up selling pressure on the real estate and
- stock markets? If the tax were cut, my own first thought
- wouldn't be "Great! What can I buy?" It would be "Great! What
- should I sell?" And one thing we don't need right now--ask any
- banker hanging on for dear life--is more real estate for sale.
- </p>
- <p> If instead the cut applied only to new purchases, there
- would be added incentive to buy but no added incentive to sell,
- and that might help. But why is it so important to give a
- special tax break to real estate, new or old, at all? Is that
- what America suffers from, a shortage of office towers? A
- shortage of malls? (Home appreciation already gets special
- breaks--you can roll your profit from one house to the next
- and take up to $125,000 in gains, tax free, once you turn 55.)
- </p>
- <p> Yes, the capital-gains rate should be cut--to ZERO!--but only on future investments in newly issued stocks and bonds
- (and "founders' stock"). There would be no special break for
- real estate or art or gold, or for securities trading--only
- the initial securities purchaser would get the break when he
- sold. Such a rifle-shot tax cut would be a huge incentive to
- invest in new companies, and to fund the expansion and
- modernization of old ones, but at a tiny fraction of the cost
- of an across-the-board cut. It would be a boon for Wall Street,
- making it that much easier to issue new securities. And it would
- be a snap to administer, because broker confirmation slips
- already denote newly issued stocks and bonds. In short, it would
- be cheap, it would be simple, and it would do exactly what the
- Administration claims it wants to do: stimulate new investment
- to improve productivity and create jobs.
- </p>
- <p> (Talk of indexing gains to inflation, meanwhile, is
- misguided. We need a simpler tax code, not one that requires a
- computer to calculate your inflation-adjusted gains and losses.
- As for the complication of a "long-term holding period," it
- wouldn't be necessary under this rifle-shot plan. Initial
- investors would have an incentive to let their gains mount tax
- free. As for traders and speculators, why impose artificial
- barriers to the movement of capital? There's nothing wrong with
- a fast profit honestly come by.)
- </p>
- <p> The combination of low interest rates and a zero capital-
- gains rate is exciting. But if more is needed--and it probably
- is--it shouldn't take the form of a quick popular tax break
- for the middle class, so everybody can buy one extra Nintendo.
- As Harvard's Robert Reich and others have argued, it should take
- the form of a big national investment in infrastructure. Much as
- America needs more video games, we need repaired bridges and
- roads more. (Not to mention a huge investment in our children.)
- Adding to the budget deficit to give everybody a little extra
- spending money is something we're not wealthy enough right now
- to do. But investing in our long-term productivity is fiscally
- prudent and would probably do at least as much to put people back
- to work, especially in the moribund construction industry.
- </p>
- <p> As for your own financial strategy, it seems to me there
- are three national scenarios you should plan for: financial
- collapse, which is probably only a real possibility if we
- convince ourselves it isn't; runaway inflation, which results
- if instead of earning or borrowing the money America needs, we
- simply print it; or--most appealing--gradually working our
- way out of the mess through hard work, restrained spending and
- wise investment in the future.
- </p>
- <p> While the government is deciding which of these three
- paths to pursue, you should, as always: spend less than you
- earn; borrow only for productive things (like education or
- tools) or things that may at least hold their value (like
- homes); have a good chunk of money someplace safe (there's
- nothing dumb about having a lot of cash earning a low rate of
- interest for a while); buy low and sell high. The stock market
- around 3,000 ain't low. Some of the real estate being dumped on
- the market, if you're rich enough to consider such things, ain't
- high.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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