Here
is a historical perspective that contributes to the current discussion about
deficit spending and, unlike many of my posts, this one doesn’t relate to the
New Deal. This
article by the (now deceased) Harvard business professor, Thomas McCraw, offers
a window into debates about taxes and deficits that the country engaged in more
than two centuries ago.
During
the 1790s, Treasury Secretary Alexander Hamilton faced a deficit that was
growing at an alarming rate. At the time, the United States owed significant
sums to foreign lenders who had funded the Revolution. Just to put things in
perspective, as McCraw’s article points out, the federal government’s
debt-to-income ratio at the time was 46 to 1, compared to today’s 6.5 to 1.
Hamilton
took a number of important steps moving forward. He refused to use vital resources
to pay off existing debts, instead choosing to take out new loans at lower
interest rates. This was most likely a good idea. Although McCraw focuses
solely on Hamilton, President Andrew Jackson succeeded in paying off the
national debt in 1835, but the strategy did not yield terrific results: a
government surplus rolled into a land bubble and then a depression. Soon after,
the US assumed more debt and has not been debt-free since (for more information
on this economic event, see this
NPR article).
Most
importantly, however, Hamilton created the Bank of the United States, which the
author of the article contends was very much in demand. At the turn of the
eighteenth century, few banks were available, meaning that those who wished to
invest and consume were limited. The creation of this precursor to a central
bank served to increase credit. This expanded the tax base and subsequently
raised government revenues. Within several decades, the debt-to-income ratio
had decreased to 8 to 1.
McCraw
contends that Hamilton’s accomplishment is relevant to today’s discussion
because Hamilton was able to solve the revenue-debt problem without raising tax
rates, but by expanding the tax base, or the “economic pie.” Hamilton
understood something that most political leaders would comprehend today: the
public is resistant to attempts to change the deficit through tax increases. But
they will be less likely to complain if the deficit can be reduced through
promoting economic activity.
McCraw’s
article is worth a read, as it offers a thought-provoking and relevant
historical perspective. However, we should be wary of believing that Hamilton’s
solutions will easily work in today’s situation. First of all, the nature of
government spending has vastly changed from the time when nearly all debt had
been accumulated through one war. Secondly, we have already extended the tax
base in the years since Hamilton ran the Treasury, through the establishment and
expansion of the federal income tax throughout the twentieth century. What McCraw’s
article might be most relevant to
(which I would support) is a reform of the current tax code that expands the
tax base through the elimination or reduction of many deductions and exclusions
for upper-income households.
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