This from Robert Reich. Please follow link to original.
According to
reports,
one of the first acts of the Republican congress will be to fire Doug
Elmendorf, current director of the non-partisan Congressional Budget
Office, because he won’t use “dynamic scoring” for his economic
projections.
Dynamic scoring is the magical-mystery math Republicans have been
pushing since they came up with supply-side “trickle-down” economics.
It’s based on the belief that cutting taxes unleashes economic growth
and thereby produces additional government revenue. Supposedly the
added revenue more than makes up for what’s lost when Congress hands out
the tax cuts.
Dynamic scoring would make it easier to enact tax cuts for the
wealthy and corporations, because the tax cuts wouldn’t look as if they
increased the budget deficit.
Incoming House Ways and Means Chairman Paul Ryan (R-Wis.)
calls it
“reality-based scoring,” but it’s actually magical scoring – which is
why Elmendorf, as well as all previous CBO directors have rejected it.
Few economic theories have been as thoroughly tested in the real world as supply-side economics, and so notoriously failed.
Ronald Reagan cut the top income tax rate from 70 percent to 28
percent and ended up nearly doubling the national debt. His first budget
director, David Stockman, later confessed he dealt with embarrassing
questions about future deficits with “magic asterisks” in the budgets
submitted to Congress. The Congressional Budget Office didn’t buy them.
George W. Bush inherited a budget surplus from Bill Clinton but then
slashed taxes, mostly on the rich. The CBO found that the Bush tax cuts
reduced revenues by
$3 trillion.
Yet Republicans don’t want to admit supply-side economics is hokum.
As a result, they’ve never had much love for the truth-tellers at the
Congressional Budget Office.
In 2011, when briefly leading the race for the Republican presidential nomination, Newt Gingrich
called
the CBO “a reactionary socialist institution which does not believe in
economic growth, does not believe in innovation and does not believe in
data that has not been internally generated.”
The CBO has continued to be a truth-telling thorn in the Republican’s side.
The budget plan Paul Ryan came up with in 2012 – likely to be a
harbinger of what’s to come from the Republican congress – slashed
Medicaid, cut taxes on the rich and on corporations, and replaced
Medicare with a less well-funded voucher plan.
Ryan claimed these measures would reduce the deficit. The Congressional Budget Office disagreed.
Ryan persevered. His 2013 and 2014 budget proposals were similarly
filled with magic asterisks. The CBO still wasn’t impressed.
Yet it’s one thing to cling to magical-mystery thinking when you have
only one house of Congress. It’s another when you’re running the whole
shebang.
Now that Elmendorf is on the way out, presumably to be replaced by
someone willing to tell Ryan and other Republicans what they’d like to
hear, the way has been cleared for all the magic they can muster.
In this as in other domains of public policy, Republicans have not shown a particular affinity for facts.
Climate change? It’s not happening, they say. And even if it is
happening, humans aren’t responsible. (Almost all scientists studying
the issue find it’s occurring and humans are the major cause.)
Widening inequality? Not occurring, they say. Even though the data show otherwise, they claim the measurements are wrong.
Voting fraud? Happening all over the country, they say, which is why
voter IDs and other limits on voting are necessary. Even though there’s
no evidence to back up their claim (the best
evidence shows no more than 31 credible incidents of fraud out of a billion ballots cast), they continue to assert it.
Evolution? Just a theory, they say. Even though all reputable
scientists support it, many Republicans at the state level say it
shouldn’t be taught without also presenting the view found in the Bible.
Weapons of mass destruction in Iraq? America’s use of torture? The
George W. Bush administration and its allies in Congress weren’t overly
interested in the facts.
The pattern seems to be: if you don’t like the facts, make them up.
Or have your benefactors finance “think tanks” filled with hired guns
who will tell the public what you and your patrons want them to say.
If all else fails, fire your own experts who tell the truth, and replace them with people who will pronounce falsehoods.
There’s one big problem with this strategy, though. Legislation based on lies often causes the public to be harmed.
Not even “truthiness,” as Stephen Colbert once called it, is an adequate substitute for the whole truth.
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