BEING STREET SMART
by Sy Harding
It's Only a Fiscal Slope Not a Cliff!
Why are Congress and the White House not panicked about the
looming fiscal ‘cliff’? Why has the Dow pulled back only 2% rather than plunging
2,000 points as time to forge an agreement by year-end has foolishly dwindled
down to just a couple of days, and odds of it happening have become remote?
Probably because the markets and politicians are aware that
the economy is not going to suddenly plunge over a cliff into an abyss on
January 2 if an agreement has not been reached by then.
Fed Chairman Bernanke did the country a disservice in
February when he used the term ‘fiscal cliff’ to describe the problems the
economy would begin to face at
year-end. The media was even more irresponsible by jumping on the phrase with
such fear-inducing drama as year-end approached.
It’s true that if an agreement isn’t reached by year-end,
tax increases and spending cuts will begin to kick in which if not amended
fairly quickly, would begin to remove roughly $600 billion from the economy next
year, enough to take an estimated 2% to 3% out of GDP growth and potentially put
the economy into a recession.
However, it isn’t that the $600 billion will abruptly
disappear from the economy on January 2 in a cliff-drop plunge.
Some effects would take place quite quickly, such as the
loss of unemployment benefits for the long-unemployed if the extended benefit
period is allowed to expire.
But most of the effects would come out of economic activity
over the course of the year, at approximately $50 billion a month, as employees
find less in their paychecks due to income-tax increases, investors pay higher
taxes on their dividends as they are received through the year, and pay higher
capital gains taxes if and as they sell holdings through the year. And of course
businesses would receive fewer orders through the year as federal spending cuts
increasingly take effect, resulting in lay-offs.
For instance, it’s been pointed out that tax-payers would
face an increase in combined taxes of approximately $500 billion in 2013. But
that does not mean taxpayers would send a check to the IRS for their share on
January 2. It means that if an agreement is not reached fairly soon into the new
year the average taxpayer would see their taxes increase by about $3,440 for
the year.
Further, keep in mind that is an average. Those who can most
easily afford it would pay the most. Remember the complaints when the Bush-era
tax cuts became law, that the richest were getting by far the biggest benefits?
Well, having those cuts expire would bring those chickens home to roost, as the
biggest tax increases would fall back on those richest tax-payers. It’s
estimated that those with taxable income (after all deductions) of $10,000 would
see an annual tax increase of $217 ($18 a month), those between $50,000 and
$75,000 an average annual increase of $2,399, those earning $500,000 to $1
million an average increase of $38,969, and those earning over $1 million an
average increase of $254,637.
Not only would those increases not be an over-a-cliff event
but spread over the year, they would probably not kick in right away in January
for most working people. Most employers would wait until the IRS gets around to
calculating new withholding rates and sends out notices.
I’m not saying that politicians are not self-serving idiots
in the way they have once again inflicted needless stress on the country. Nor am
I saying that some damage has not already been done to the economy as a result
of the uncertainties the delay has created.
But the stress that has been put in the minds of many on
Main Street (and some investors), that if an agreement is not reached by
year-end they will wake up Tuesday morning to an economy that is a heap of
rubble at the bottom of a cliff, is a huge exaggeration.
I even like the thought that allowing the economy to go over
the supposed cliff for a few days will make it easier for a better agreement to
be reached.
Right now to reach agreement politicians have to debate how
much to allow taxes to rise and for whom, apparently difficult for many. But
once large tax increases kick in at year-end for everyone when the Bush-era tax
cuts expire automatically, they will be debating how much to cut taxes to
correct the situation, more appealing to their politicking nature of trying to
look like they’re working to help their constituents.
So the
markets (and yes even the politicians) just might have it right by not panicking
at this point.
Sy Harding is president of Asset Management Research Corp, and editor of www.StreetSmartReport.com, and the free market blog, www.streetsmartpost.com. He can also be followed on Twitter @streetsmartpost
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These reports reflect our opinions and are based on our best judgment, but no warranty is given or implied as to their accuracy. Past performance does not guarantee future performance.
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