

REAGANOMICS VS. OBAMANOMICS April 8, 2009 President Obama says the economy is the worst
since the Great Depression. Actually, it is the worst since the
Reagan recession of 1982-83. Further, the 2009 market crash is not
the worst since 1929 but since 1987—also on Ronald Reagan’s watch. What did Reagan do—or, more importantly, didn’t do—in
response to these “crises?” How was Ronald Reagan’s response
different from what Barack Obama is doing? In both cases, Reagan did the exact opposite of
Obama’s massive government spending infusions. In fact, it’s worth
noting that Bill Clinton—listen up, Democrats—didn’t invoke Obama’s
method when he faced recessions at the very start and end of his
presidency. (That’s another article for another time.) As for the Reagan recession, the president waited
extremely patiently—to the point where he drove his advisers nearly
nuts—for his huge 1981 tax cuts to take effect. He didn’t spend
money because he believed spending had been out-of-control,
particularly since FDR’s New Deal and LBJ’s Great Society, which
created systemic deficits. Reagan felt that high spending, high
regulation, and high taxes had sapped the American economy of its
vitality, and particularly its ability to rebound from recession.
The economy needed to be freed in order to perform. Reagan’s prescription rested on four pillars: tax
cuts, deregulation, reductions in the rate of government spending,
and a stable, carefully managed growth of the money supply. The
federal income tax reduction was the centerpiece: Reagan secured a
25 percent across-the-board reduction over a three-year period,
beginning in October 1981. The upper income marginal tax rate was
dropped from 70 percent, which Reagan believed was punitive and
stifling, to 28 percent. By 1983, America had begun its longest peacetime
economic expansion in history, cruising right through the 1987
market plunge. What did Reagan do about the October 1987 crash?
Basically nothing—certainly nothing like a massive government
“stimulus.” “Some people are talking of panic,” Reagan calmly
confided to his diary. “Chrmn. of Stock Exchange is acting very
upset.” Those are Reagan’s only diary references to the
financial crisis. With the economy freed, he was confident it would
bounce back. Reagan let the economy correct itself. Okay, but Reaganomics created huge deficits,
right? That’s the big criticism. It isn’t accurate. It
needs to be understood—now more than ever. First off, know these crucial facts: The deficit
under Ronald Reagan increased 35 percent, from an inherited deficit
(from President Jimmy Carter) of $104 billion in 1980 to a final
deficit of $141 billion in 1989. The deficit peaked at $236 billion
in 1983, particularly because of the plummet in tax revenue during
the recession. It began dropping steadily in 1986, continuing
through the 1987 crash. (Source: Congressional Budget Office
figures, “Historical Tables.”) Compare that to what’s happening now, where the
direct opposite of Reaganomics is being pursued by the liberal
Democratic president and Congressional leadership: President Obama inherited a record
Bush deficit of $400 billion, but is generating a far worse
$1.8-trillion deficit in his first year. (Source: Congressional
Budget Office, March 20, 2009.) We’ve never seen anything like this.
This unthinkable explosion is a direct result of the stunning
government spending unleashed by Obama and the Democratic leadership
in just eight weeks—an unheard of development in 233 years of
American history. So, think about this: Ronald Reagan increased the deficit by 35 percent
in eight years, whereas Barack Obama has increased the deficit by
450 percent in eight weeks. Reagan created an extra $37 billion in
annual deficit. Obama has already created an extra $1.4 trillion in
annual deficit. But what, exactly, caused the Reagan deficits?
There were several factors: the recession of 1982-83, the Reagan
defense spending—implemented to turn the screws on the Soviets—the
domestic social spending by the Democratic Congress, and more. Some
reasons were Reagan’s fault; others were Congress’ doing—both share
blame in differing degrees. Importantly, and despite what you’ve heard,
Reagan’s tax cuts didn’t create the deficit. Tax revenues actually
boomed from roughly $600 billion in 1981 to $1 trillion in 1989. The primary cause of the deficit was recession
and spending, mainly spending—as is always the case. It is
especially the case right now under Obama, with the spending
component utterly out-of-control. The crucial lesson for today is that the best
“stimulus” is one that relies on the tried-and-true American way:
letting free individuals and entrepreneurs stimulate the economy
through their own earnings and economic activity. Wealth
confiscation and redistribution by government collectivists and
central planners never works; unfortunately, it is that failed,
extremely destructive method that Americans elected in November
2008. For three decades now, the minority of Americans
who make up the hard left have been trashing Reaganomics. Well, on
November 4, 2008, for the first time in American history, they
convinced enough voters to join them in electing the extreme
opposite. At long last, they will pay for the economic consequences
of their ideology, as will their children and grandchildren.
We believe that the Constitution of the United States speaks for itself. There is no need to rewrite, change or reinterpret it to suit the fancies of special interest groups or protected classes.