http://www.economist.com/PrinterFriendly.cfm?Story_ID=3559860

The revolution comes home
Jan 13th 2005 | WASHINGTON, DC
From The Economist print edition


MOST two-term American presidents lose steam in their second four
years. If scandal doesn't get them (Watergate, Iran-contra, Monica
Lewinsky), weariness does. Sitting presidents rarely campaign on a
revolutionary agenda, just feel-good blather: Ronald Reagan's "Morning
in America", or Bill Clinton's "Bridge to the 21st century". And a
re-elected president is a lame-duck long before his second term ends,
leaving little time to get much done.

George Bush seems determined to be different. He has laid out a
second-term domestic agenda more ambitious than anything seen in the
first term, and that was hardly a lull. It brought the biggest tax
cuts since 1981, the broadest education reform in a generation and
the costliest expansion of Medicare, the state health system for the
elderly, since it was set up in 1965.

If the first-term legacy is largely a deficit, the second term promises
to shake some of the country's economic pillars. At the Republican
convention last September, Mr Bush spoke of transforming America's
fundamental economic institutions for the 21st century, and offered
two broad organising themes. The first was to make the United States
the best place in the world to do business. That covered changes from
tort reform (fewer burdensome lawsuits) to a simpler tax code, spurring
more economic growth. The second theme was to foster an "ownership
society", by giving individuals greater control over, and responsibility
for, their own health care and pensions. In particular, it meant
restructuring Social Security, America's public pension system, by
basing it partly on private accounts.

Empty campaign promises? Not so. At his post-election press conference,
the president left no doubt that he regarded his victory as a mandate
for reform. "I earned capital in the campaign, political capital", he
said, "and now I intend to spend it".

In recent weeks, priorities have been set. Tort reform is top of the
list of first-term left-overs. In early January Mr Bush gave three
speeches pushing laws to curb frivolous lawsuits. Top of the new list
of second-term priorities is Social Security reform. Tax reform has
been put off until a bipartisan presidential commission under two
ex-senators, John Breaux and Connie Mack, has studied the issue; they
have been asked to report by the end of July. No one expects much action
on tax until 2006. In contrast, the White House has hinted that it wants
to move on pension reform within the next few months.

There is more, though the other topics may be even more
contentious. Judicial appointments are a top priority for Mr Bush's
conservative base, but are certain to create a poisonous battle in the
Senate. Immigration reform, particularly the creation of a guest-worker
programme, will cause painful divisions within Republican ranks. Mr Bush
may attempt them, all the same.

The president's ambition, coupled with increased Republican majorities
in both the House of Representatives and the Senate, makes for heady
expectations. Right-wing activists talk of a "conservative New Deal",
with Mr Bush changing America as profoundly as Franklin Roosevelt did in
the 1930s. Democrats, equally exercised, accuse Mr Bush of fabricating
a crisis in the pensions system, in particular, in order to destroy the
fabric of modern America.

But just as the scale of the project has emerged, so the political
landscape has become more difficult. According to Gallup polls, Mr Bush
has the weakest job-approval rating of any newly re-elected president
since 1948. High casualties in Iraq are the main reason, but the public
also seems uninspired by much of this reform agenda. The Democrats are
also surprisingly united in their opposition, particularly to Social
Security reform. In the case of tax cuts, in the first term, several
Democrats switched sides early on; but virtually none has defected in
favour of private retirement accounts. Even centrist Democratic groups
have come out against them. At the same time, congressional Republicans
are both nervous about supporting pension reform and divided on how to
go about it.

As a result, Washington's punditocracy has been whispering about
over-reach even before the inauguration. Nasty comparisons are being
made between Mr Bush's Social Security plan and Bill Clinton's
disastrous efforts to overhaul America's health-care system in 1993. And
Cassandras are crowing that Mr Bush's second term will be a spectacular
failure.

The hyberbole on both sides is misplaced. Mr Bush's agenda combines
the incremental and the radical, the sensible and the reckless, the
politically doable and the impossible. Even under the most favourable
circumstances, not everything will get done: Mr Bush has simply put too
much on the table. But unless the White House loses its political touch
entirely, some reforms will be pushed through.

Of torts and taxes

A few early signs are good. Of the various unfinished jobs from the
first term, tort reform is the right one to focus on. The tort system
-- designed to compensate accident victims and deter negligence -- is
expensive, economically distorting and hideously inefficient. America
spends over $230 billion a year, or around 2% of GDP, on these kinds of
legal actions, far more than any other advanced economy. But victims
of negligence get a remarkably bad deal. Over half the compensation is
eaten up by administrative costs.

Trial lawyers apart, few deny that America's tort system needs
reform. And Mr Bush's basic ideas, though clearly a boon for his
corporate cronies, are sensible. He wants to cap non-economic damages
at $250,000; shift national class-action lawsuits from state to federal
courts to stop plaintiffs shopping among the states for the highest
pay-outs; and reform the rules for asbestos compensation. (Asbestos
claims, by themselves, explain much of the recent rise in tort costs.)

Shaking up the tort system will not revolutionise America's economy. But
it would save billions of wasted dollars and might boost productivity
growth. The House has already passed Mr Bush's proposals; the sticking
point has long been the Senate. That remains the case, but, with a
bigger Republican majority and some judicious compromises, tort reform
might actually happen.

That is more than can be said for other left-overs from the first term,
particularly Mr Bush's first-term tax cuts. These officially expire by
the end of 2010. Passing new legislation to make them permanent (or at
least permanent until the size of the deficit forces a rethink) is high
on the president's second-term agenda.


This obsession goes down well with conservative activists, who want all
taxes cut at all times. From an economic and strategic perspective,
it is misplaced. First-term tax cuts have already helped to reduce
America's tax revenue, as a percentage of GDP, to its lowest level since
the 1950s (see chart 1). If Mr Bush's new-found fiscal prudence is
genuine (he promises to halve the budget deficit), he has no business
making America's fiscal problems worse. More important, setting his
first-term tax cuts in stone makes his bigger second-term goal of broad
tax reform considerably harder to achieve. And although tax reform is
likely to be much less ambitious than many conservatives now imagine, it
will still be tough to do.

Mr Bush is right that America's tax code is a mess. The tax laws and
their attendant regulations run to 60,000 pages, 10,000 of which were
created during Mr Bush's first term. The annual cost of tax compliance
is estimated at $115 billion. Simplifying the system by slashing its
myriad deductions would be a big step forward.

And that is a large part of what Mr Bush intends to do. Although
conservative ideologues dream of killing off the income tax and
replacing it with a flat tax or national sales tax, the White House has
little truck with such radicalism. Mr Bush wants to improve today's
system, not junk it. He approves of tax breaks for mortgage interest,
as well as the need to keep incentives for charitable giving. His
commission, tellingly, includes no prominent advocates of fundamental
tax reform.

Incrementalism does not rule out ambition. If a simpler tax code is one
Bush goal, the other is a code friendlier to savings and investment. The
president's first-term tax cuts have already pushed in that direction,
by slashing tax rates on dividends and capital gains. He would like
to protect yet more investment income from taxation and allow firms
to deduct investment spending up-front, rather than charging the
depreciation of capital over time.

Paying for such changes (assuming Mr Bush has given up his first-term
recklessness) means eliminating deductions. Two targets that the White
House is said to be considering are the state-income-tax deduction
and the tax-break firms receive for providing health benefits to
their employees. Eliminating either would involve a huge political
battle. Most Washington budget veterans scoff at the very idea,
particularly since Mr Bush has already put off any action until 2006.

Some reform looks likely, however, thanks largely to the Alternative
Minimum Tax. The AMT, which was originally designed to prevent rich
Americans avoiding taxation, will hit 24m taxpayers by 2008, up from
fewer than 3m in 2003. With luck, Mr Bush will marshal the political
pressure from angry AMT-payers to push for some base-broadening
reform. A clear political bargain could be arranged: elimination of the
AMT in return for scrapping favoured deductions. The tax code will not
be rewritten, but even modest improvements would be well worth having.

The Big Enchilada

On Social Security, in contrast, Team Bush has no truck with incremental
change. A recent (leaked) White House memo described the reform project
as one whose "scope and scale...are hard to overestimate". Success in
revamping Social Security, it went on, would "rank as one of the most
significant conservative governing achievements ever".

Social Security, created in 1935 by Franklin Roosevelt, is America's
biggest and most popular government programme, providing pensions to
the elderly and disabled. Thanks to Social Security, poverty among
the elderly has been virtually eliminated. Most Americans rely on the
programme for much of their retirement income.

As in most of the rest of the world, the combination of longer life
expectancy and lower birth-rates will put increased financial pressure
on this pay-as-you-go social insurance system. Over the coming decades,
Social Security's payments will rise much faster than its revenues,
which come from payroll taxes. The net present value of this financial
imbalance over the next 75 years is $3.7 trillion, less than 1% of
cumulative GDP. Over an even longer horizon, the present value of the
permanent imbalance is estimated at around $10 trillion, a number Mr
Bush loves to repeat.

These numbers can be hard to interpret, but the larger point is that
Social Security is on an unsustainable trajectory, one that goes well
beyond the retirement of the baby-boomers. It is not an immediate
"crisis". In fact, payroll-tax revenues will exceed pension payments
until 2018, masking America's overall fiscal imbalance. Nor is it
America's biggest long-term fiscal problem. The financial burden from
Medicare will be much bigger (see chart 2). Mr Bush's first-term
decision to introduce a prescription-drug benefit for retirees worsened
Medicare's long-term financial imbalance by more than twice as much
as the entire Social Security problem. Nonetheless, Social Security
needs fixing. And that means either boosting revenues (for instance, by
raising payroll taxes) or reducing promised benefits.


But cutting the pension fund's deficit is not what makes conservatives
excited. Their most treasured objective is to restructure the system
into one based partly on private accounts. Individuals would be allowed
to divert a share of their payroll taxes into such accounts, gradually
building up a pre-funded retirement nest-egg in return for a lower
guaranteed benefit from the government.

Diverting payroll taxes would shrink America's biggest government
programme and change the nature and scope of social insurance. According
to its proponents, it would create a nation of investors (and hence,
fear Democrats, of Republican voters), foster a savings culture and
boost work incentives. On this logic, Americans would work harder,
regarding the diversion of money into their own accounts as equivalent
to a tax cut.

The scale of the change would depend on how big a share of payroll
taxes was diverted. According to proponents, large accounts would not
only have more emphatic effects on work and saving incentives, but, by
capturing higher returns in equity markets, would do more (though at
higher risk) to address Social Security's financial imbalance. On no
plausible assumption, however, could private accounts eliminate it.

A small but vocal "free lunch" group of conservative Republicans
disagrees. Large private accounts, they claim, can fix Social Security's
finances with no need for benefit cuts or tax increases. Legislation
proposed by John Sununu, a Republican senator, and Paul Ryan, a
Republican congressman, proposes diverting half of payroll tax revenue
with no reductions in promised Social Security benefits. The plan
relies on permanent subsidies from the rest of the budget and wholly
implausible cuts in spending outside Social Security to make its numbers
add up.

Fortunately, Mr Bush has not been tempted by the free-lunch route, at
least not yet. Though he has ruled out raising payroll taxes, the White
House memo made clear it was a "bad idea" to push individual accounts
alone. Instead, the White House is keen on a plan first proposed by the
Bush-appointed Commission to Strengthen Social Security in 2001. This
would allow individuals to divert an average of one-sixth of their
payroll taxes into individual accounts. It would cut Social Security's
future liabilities by indexing the calculation of initial retirement
benefits to prices rather than wages. Although future retirees' pensions
would stay constant in real terms, they would no longer rise in line
with average wage growth. Over time, Social Security would replace an
ever smaller share of workers' pre-retirement income, from 42% today
for a typical worker to 20% in 2075 and ever less thereafter. This
plan would involve substantial transitional borrowing (around $2
trillion over the next decade alone), although this would be offset by a
reduction in the government's obligations to future retirees.

Judging the risks

Until the details become clearer, it is hard to judge the merits of any
White House plan. Economically, the benefits of private accounts -- at
least in the early years -- are likely to be modest. A debt-financed
transition will not boost national savings; though the accounts will
imply higher private savings, government borrowing will rise by the
same amount. The gain from private accounts might be eroded by high
management fees or poor risk-management by account-holders. But,
in principle, Mr Bush could craft a package that shores up Social
Security's financial health and reaps the benefits of individual
accounts, without sacrificing the basic nature of social insurance.

Less obvious is whether that is politically possible. Americans are
increasingly concerned that Social Security is in trouble (in a recent
Washington Post poll, more than seven out of ten said the system faced
"major problems"). But while younger people like the sound of private
accounts, polls suggest that Americans overall are almost evenly divided
over whether people should be allowed to invest their payroll taxes in
financial markets.

Mr Bush's success will depend on how well he explains his
ideas. Interest groups are massing on both sides of the debate. The
AARP, America's huge pensioners' lobby, is leading the opposition
against the "risky" privatisation scheme. But money is also piling up
on the other side, particularly from well-financed conservative lobby
groups.

At present, the congressional maths does not look good. Congressmen
who face re-election next year are terrified of talking about benefit
cuts. Other Republicans are nervous about the upfront borrowing
involved. To protect their political flank, party leaders have told
Mr Bush that this scale of social change must be done with bipartisan
support. But embattled Democrats are loth to give Mr Bush an inch, and
the compromises that might appeal to them -- such as raising payroll
taxes -- will appal conservative ideologues.

For all these reasons, Social Security reform will be a long, tough
battle. Failure need not sink Mr Bush's whole agenda, but it will
overshadow any progress elsewhere. Without pension reform, Mr Bush's
second term will be as disappointing as most others. Success, in
contrast, could place him beside Ronald Reagan as a true conservative
revolutionary

_______________________________________________
http://www.mccmedia.com/mailman/listinfo/brin-l

Reply via email to