(Bloomberg View) -- Last June, the center-left government in Sweden proposed cutting the country's top corporate tax rate, already aĀ below-the-international-average 22 percent, to 20 percent. The rate cut would beĀ offset by a set of limitations on the deductibility of interest, so overall the Swedish government --Ā currently running a fiscal surplus of more than 1 percent of gross domestic product --Ā did not expect any revenue loss from the changes.
The proposalĀ has beenĀ slowly working its way through the Swedish system since then. After a comment period that ended in September, the government began composing legislation that is due outĀ the first half of next yearĀ andĀ expected to take effect on July 1. The interest-deductibility changes, aimed at making "aggressive tax planning"Ā harder and reducing corporate debt, are the centerpiece of the plan, so theĀ reduction in the corporate rate may become bigger or smaller once theĀ interest provisions are finalized.
Here in the U.S., lawmakers are alsoĀ close to finalizingĀ legislation that would cut the top corporate tax rate to 20 percent andĀ limit interest deductions by corporations. Just like Sweden! Except for this part: Given how much higher the U.S. corporate tax rate was to start with (35 percent), the revenue loss from the rate cutĀ is going to overwhelm the gains from the interest deduction limits. As a result, a fiscal deficit that's currently at 3.5 percent of GDPĀ seems likely to pass 4 percent, even if the legislation delivers a substantial boost to economic growth.
IĀ haveĀ written several columns lately about Republican claims that tax cuts will pay for themselves from the resulting increase in economic growth, and have been wondering why I get so worked up about them.Ā TheĀ obvious reason isĀ that the claims are false: No serious analysis by even the most sympathetic economist has found any of the big tax-cutting legislation enactedĀ or proposed sinceĀ 1980 to be even close to revenue-neutral. Ā And so while I reallyĀ can't say with confidence whetherĀ the tax bill being hammered out by House and Senate conferees this week will be good for the U.S. economy or bad, I can say with confidence that when Senate Majority LeaderĀ Mitch McConnell asserts thatĀ the bill will be revenue-neutral or better, or Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin trots out a joke of an "analysis" to make the same claim, they are full ofĀ baloney.
But I thinkĀ what may bother me even more isĀ that thisĀ insistence on the magical properties of tax cuts seems to have prevented the U.S. from taking full advantage of the actual positive properties of tax cuts and tax reforms that other wealthy countries such as Sweden have discovered over the pastĀ few decades. SinceĀ Ronald Reagan was elected president in 1980, it has worked something like this in the U.S.:Ā Republican true believers push for taxĀ cuts that often have quite sensible aspects but leave gaping holes in the budget, whichĀ subsequently have to be filled by Republican realists (George H.W. Bush in 1990) or Democrats, who generally try to do soĀ by increasing taxes on the wealthy.
The result is a tax system that relies more heavily on income taxes than is the norm among members of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, the club of the world's affluent democracies, and also levies those taxes more progressively (that is, there's a bigger gap between the top rate and the middle and bottom) than most other rich countries do.
The U.S. also has the highestĀ statutory corporate tax rate among OECD membersĀ (which of course may be about to change big time), but the actual taxes it collects from corporations are below the OECD norm.Ā Not coincidentally, the U.S. runsĀ one of the biggest government deficits in the OECD.Ā Its economy has also failedĀ to grow significantly faster thanĀ those of other OECDĀ countries (Sweden, for example) with much bigger overall tax burdens --Ā a result, economist Peter Lindert has convincingly argued, of much more economically efficient tax and social-welfare systems outside the U.S.
Now it's possible that I have the causation backward. Maybe it's mainly Democratic unwillingness to consider the economic benefits of a flatter, more consumption-oriented tax system that has kept the U.S. from moving more in that direction. But given that it's the Republicans who have mostly driven the national discussion on taxes since 1980, and are certainly driving it right now, it seems fair to focus on what they're doing and what they say.
What they've been doing this fall is pushingĀ through a tax billĀ with some sensible aspects (and some not-so-sensible ones!), whileĀ not justĀ largely ignoring its negativeĀ impact on government revenue but claiming against all evidence that it won't have a negative impact. Instead of responsibly advancing their priorities, they'reĀ leaving a mess for somebody else to clean up. And it's unlikely toĀ be cleaned up in a way that either Republicans or Swedes would approve of.
This column does not necessarily reflect the opinion of the editorial board or Bloomberg LP and its owners.
Justin Fox is a Bloomberg View columnist. He was the editorial director of Harvard Business Review and wrote for Time, Fortune and American Banker. He is the author of āThe Myth of the Rational Market.ā
I got that from Google's translation of the government's press release Ā from last June.Ā
According to the Joint Committee on Taxation's estimates (a pdf of which downloads automatically if you click on this link the House bill's rate cut would cost trillion over years, while the deduction limit will bring in billion; for the Senate bill those numbers would be trillion and billion. TheseĀ estimates do not factor in projected macroeconomic effects of the legislation.
I'm not including the Tax Reform Act of which cut some tax rates but wasn't billed as a tax cut and does in fact appear to have been close to revenue neutral.
Restraining spending is of course another way to fill the gaps. But since the presidency of Bill Clinton, when reductions in defense spending (both in dollar terms and as a percentage of GDP) coincided withĀ a demographically driven decline in Social Security outlays (as a percentage of GDP) to allow for a significant decline in government outlays (again, as a percentage of GDP), this has proved hard to accomplish.
It's also worth mentioning that one of the current bills before Congress that would do the most to move the U.S. toward a more consumption-oriented tax system is the Progressive Consumption Tax sponsored by Democratic Senator Ben Cardin of Maryland.
To contact the editor responsible for this story: Katy Roberts at kroberts29@bloomberg.net.
For more columns from Bloomberg View, visit http://www.bloomberg.com/view.
©2017 Bloomberg L.P.
Essential Business Intelligence, Continuous LIVE TV, Sharp Market Insights, Practical Personal Finance Advice and Latest Stories ā On NDTV Profit.