How Can I Trust AEI?

I meant to write this a few days ago, but never got around to it:

I want there to be a respectable conservative think tank. I want there to be good research out of the right. I want there to be policy analysis that constructively analyzes both the right and left’s proposals. Right now, there are a number of left organizations that do that. The Citizens for Tax Justice leans leftward but produces good, quality work.

It would be nice if the right could actually attempt to put out an unbalanced report. The Heritage Foundation long ago lost credibility in my eyes. But I’ve always tried to give the American Enterprise Institute (AEI) a chance. For instance, its response to the Tax Policy Center’s analysis of Romney’s tax plan is something I can at least respect and debate:

Now I don’t have a problem with the general analytical approach here, nor am I surprised by the findings given that approach. The U.S. has an extremely progressive income tax system where the top 1% pay 40% of the income taxes, while the bottom 50% pay just 2%. Across-the-board tax cuts will favor upper-income folks and “paying for them” will make the system less progressive in terms of the tax burden.

But I do have some issues with the study, as well as an observation or two.

First, the study assumes that Romney’s corporate income tax will be paid for by eliminating about $100 billion in business tax breaks. Yet an AEI study suggests that the U.S. corporate tax rate is deeply on the wrong side of the Laffer Curve and a cut to 25% might well pay for itself. So that $100 billion could help pay for individual income tax reductions.

Second, the study offers one scenario that assumes the tax plan produces greater economic growth than the TPC baseline scenario with a revenue loss of around $300 billion instead of $360 billion. Apply that $100 billion in corporate savings, and the revenue loss — before scaling back individual tax breaks — would be around $200 billion. At that point, the supposed tax hike for those making under $200,000 would likely be much less than 1%.

Third, I would guess the Romney campaign is betting on even higher GDP growth estimates than Brookings-TPC, assuming the economy might get a confidence bounce from business, investors and consumers after a Romney win, especially if he is able to produce major tax and entitlement reform.

I haven’t seen any other study on the correct Laffer curve rate for the corporate tax rate than AEI’s. It’s great that AEI has done that research. And while I don’t necessarily agree with their points (corporate tax revenue isn’t just related to the Laffer curve, it also has to do with the international system), I think that reasonable people can disagree over them. And on top of that, the authors agree that “across-the-board tax cuts will favor upper-income folks and “paying for them” will make the system less progressive in terms of the tax burden.” It’s good stuff.

But then the President of AEI, Arthur Brooks, comes out with a trash column in the Wall Street Journal. It mainly focuses on the Administration’s decision to issue welfare waivers. This has been thoroughly debunked all week so I’m not going to go into it. What I do want to point out is how Brooks opens the op-ed:

Within the space of just two weeks, Americans have witnessed two radically different philosophies about the free enterprise system from President Obama. In his notorious Roanoke, Va., speech of July 13, he said “If you’ve got a business—you didn’t build that. Somebody else made that happen.” That is, Americans have not fully earned their success. (bolding mine)

Are you kidding me?! It’s dishonest and slimy for Romney to slice Obama’s words like that. For a supposedly respectable head of a conservative think tank to do so is disgraceful and despicable. Honestly, Brooks 100% knows what he is doing here. His entire goal is to trick the American public. How can I trust anything AEI produces when its president writes such garbage?

Liberals Should Use the Term “Obamacare”

President Obama signs the Affordable Care Act into law

For a while, liberals stayed away from the term, but as the public as grown more and more accustomed to it, they have changed tactics.

I’m with Kevin Drum. I’ve never really had a problem with the term. I’ve never really seen what the problem is.  And I somewhat agree with Drum when he writes “if ACA eventually becomes popular, then Obamacare will be a positive term. If it fails, then it will fade away. It’s that simple.”

I don’t think it’d fade away if the law fails. Conservatives will forever use it to remind the public that the Democrats tried and failed to reform health care. But I think there’s a better reason for liberals to use the term “Obamacare.” If (and when, in my opinion) the law succeeds and popularity for it soars, Obama and the Democrats deserve credit it.

And Democrats will receive a great share of that credit, but Republicans are not going to just let the Dems bask in the glory of the law without trying to gain some of that credit themselves. They may claim that the success of the law is because of the state-run exchanges, not the federal government. They may claim it’s a result of governors actually accepting the new Medicaid expansion. No matter what though, they are going to try to spin it more in their favor, no matter how hard that may be.

And under that scenario, “Obamacare” would certainly disappear from the conservative lexicon. But it shouldn’t disappear from the public’s lexicon. After all, conservatives have used the word to attack Obama for the past 3+ years. Why should it disappear right when the law becomes successful?

In all likelihood, it wouldn’t. It’s likely too ingrained in the public image of the law to simply vanish just because it’s no longer a conservative talking point. But Democrats have proven inept at messaging the law and it’s not impossible for that to happen.

But Democrats and Obama deserve credit for the law if it succeeds. They cannot allow Republican messaging to diminish the fact that the Democrat plan worked. So how do we prevent that from happening? By calling it “Obamacare” now. Make sure the name is even more embedded in the public discourse. Make sure Democrats are used to using the term. Support the law and build a positive message around the term. And don’t back away from it if (and when) it succeeds. That’s how you ensure that Obama and Democrats get credit.

It starts by accepting the term now and I’m glad to see Democrats (finally) doing that. (Image Via)

Online Piracy

My Washington Monthly internship has unfortunately come to an end. I learned a lot and was able to write more than 20 blog posts for the site, fact check a number of articles and help with research on many topics. I want to thank everyone there for making it such an enjoyable experience!

The last thing I wrote for the Monthly was a look at the online piracy of music. In short, online piracy is not an issue. Here’s an excerpt:

The RIAA would like Congress to treat intellectual property the same as physical property. Under such a scenario, Congress would pass laws that prevent all illegal downloading. The main goal of such laws would be to prevent theft and to protect the music industry’s profits. But digital music is different than physical property; it’s intellectual property and thus governed by the Copyright Clause. If the rise of online downloading had caused a drop in the quantity of music and artists were no longer entering the industry, then Congress would have a reason to crack down on online piracy. The evidence points in the opposite direction.

The quantity of music, including both new albums and new artists, has not decreased with the advent of digital music and the rise of online piracy. According to Nielsen SoundScan, the authority on music industry statistics, artists released 38,857 new in 1999 when Napster debuted and not once from 1992-2002 were there more than 40,000 albums released in a year. In 2008, the number of albums released reached an all-time high at 106,000. As the recession hit the following year, the number dropped to 96,000 and thendropped again, in 2010 to 75,000. But in 2011, it rebounded to 77,000 new releases, nearly double the number released in 1999.

I went through all the academic literature on online piracy I could find and will have more on what I found that is not in the piece later on. Until then though, go check it out.