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Obama Immigration Speech

U.S. President Barack Obama speaks about immigration reform during a visit to Del Sol High School in Las Vegas, Nevada November 21, 2014. (Photo: Reuters)

Of all the annoying things President Obama does, one of the worst is his hectoring Republicans and conservatives for their partisanship when he is the quintessential divisive partisan.

The Washington Post reports that the day after the shootings in Charleston, South Carolina, Obama began the day angry and frustrated and ended it admitting that he has been unable to change the culture of polarization and gridlock in Washington, which he is obviously blaming for the climate that led to the shootings.

Please imagine the level of arrogance it would take to assume one could, as president of the United States, even with the cooperation of other Washington politicians, create an atmosphere that would make such episodes of evil in the nation obsolete.

That Obama does make these assumptions is pretty clear from his immediate effort to scapegoat others for generating the type of angst he assumes led to this episode.

He said: “When I ran in 2008, I in fact did not say I would fix it. I said we could fix it. I didn’t say, ‘Yes, I can.’ I said, ‘Yes, we can.'” He continued, “If you’re dissatisfied that every few months we have a mass shooting in this country killing innocent people, then I need you to mobilize and organize a constituency that says this is not normal and we are going to change it.”

With that statement, he attempted to link up the partisanship with the killings and blame the former for the latter.

But let’s accept this assumption, for the sake of argument, that a sitting president does have the power, in cooperation with other Beltway bigwigs, to bring about a wholesale change in people’s attitudes and fundamental nature that could prevent mass shootings motivated by race or mass shootings in which a firearm of some kind is the primary weapon.

If Obama truly believed that, then why didn’t he try to do it instead of being the most self-centered, divisive, partisan president in modern history and doing just the opposite? If he really values bipartisanship and collegiality so much, why didn’t he ever attempt to compromise instead of running roughshod over anyone who even thought about dissenting?

Why did he tell Republicans to quit talking and to sit in the back of the car? Why did he remind Republicans that he is the president, implying that his will should control?

The reason is that regardless of what Obama says about valuing bipartisanship, he only does when people roll over to his dictates. As long as people are docile, he’s happy and agreeable, but when they object to his destructive agenda, he becomes petty, bitter, strident, vindictive and despotic. For him, it’s always been “my way or the highway.”

When the people, through their elected representatives, rejected Obamacare, he ramrodded it through using corrupt and dictatorial tactics. When the voters repudiated his agenda in the 2010 congressional elections, he pretended to hear their message, but when he explained his perception of their message, we learned that he believed they had only rejected his agenda because he hadn’t done a sufficient job of explaining it. It couldn’t possibly have been that the bitter-clinging rubes were capable of gathering their own information and making informed decisions and had rejected his terrible policies.

When the people rejected his agenda again in 2014, he didn’t listen and promise to make adjustments. He doubled down in his determination to circumvent their will further through highhanded executive orders and administrative regulations.

In case you think I’m unfairly charging Obama with scapegoating, please consider his other statements on the Charleston tragedy. He cited a letter he had received from a Colorado man who voted for him twice but expressed disillusionment over the continuing gridlock. Obama said he told him: “You’re right. I am frustrated. You have every right to be frustrated because Congress doesn’t work the way it should. Issues are left unattended. Folks are more interested in scoring political points than getting things done.” He added that incentives are built into our political system to encourage polarized politics. “As mightily as I have struggled against that, I told him: ‘You’re right. It still is broken.'”

Obama hasn’t struggled against polarization; he has elevated it to a new level and reveled in it.

He conveniently claims that by using the pronoun “we” in “yes, we can,” he meant that all of us could change things together, but anyone who has witnessed his narcissism knows that he was trying to create the distinct impression that he — single-handedly, chin up in the air and Roman columns in the background — could usher in utopian changes. If he meant “we” in any sense at all, he meant that people could join hands and worship him together.

It’s sad that Obama and some other leftists believe they can fundamentally alter the human condition through politics as a primary change agent, but it’s even worse that Obama engages in the opposite type of behavior that would be necessary to make such changes if in fact they were possible.

He simply will not quit playing the race card and exploiting every tragedy for partisan advantage. When tragedies occur, he offers not reassuring words but words of division and blame, almost always grounded in partisanship and, when relevant, race.

It would be wonderful if just once, he could rise above his own partisanship and bitter feelings and at least try to offer words of consolation instead of invective and recrimination.

David Limbaugh: President Obama annoyingly hectors Republicans

Rachel-Dolezal-NAACP

Rachel Dolezal, the former president of the Spokane, Washington chapter of the NAACP, in the moment she was caught living a lie.

Rachel Dolezal, the former head of the NAACP chapter in Spokane, Washington, was caught posing as a black woman and resigned from her post. Most voters — 65 percent — agree that race is based on birth, not self-identification or preference. Still, 14 percent say race should be determined by preference, while another 21 percent are not sure.

A new Rasmussen Reports survey finds that 63 percent of likely voters believe Dolezal was intentionally lying when she claimed she was black, but 13 percent disagree and 23 percent are not sure. Dolezal, who also claimed she was raised hunting with a bow and reprimanded by her father with a monkey whip, both of which are untrue on multiple levels, was exposed when authorities met with her parents in the course of an investigation.

The former NAACP head claimed that she received threats in the mail — sent to a lock and key mailbox, strangely — and the red flag was noticed by authorities immediately. When they went to speak with what turned out to be her biological parents, they were shocked to see they were white. A local reporter caught wind of the story and confronted Dolezal, who promptly ran off of camera after she realized her world had collapsed.

However, while 65 percent of white and 68 percent of other minority voters say Dozelal was being deceitful, just 46 percent of black voters agree.

Further, 52 percent of black voters think Dolezal, who’s family says she is mentally ill, should have kept her leadership role at the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People. That’s a view shared by just 20 percent of whites and 32 percent of other minority voters.

Overall, 56 percent say Dolezal’s decision to resign was the correct decision, while 25 percent believe she should’ve stayed and 18 percent are not sure.

Meanwhile, 67 percent of white voters and 62 percent of other minority voters think racial identity is determined by birth, but just 51 percent of black voters agree. When black voters are factored in with other minority groups, just a quarter think it should be determined by preference.

More on Demographics

“Voters of all ages agree that racial identity should be determined by birth, not preference, but those under 40 are twice as likely as their elders to share the latter view,” Rasmussen says. “Younger voters are also far less likely to believe Dolezal should have given up her post at the NAACP.”

Yet, even 40 percent of voters who believe racial identity should be determined by preference still say Dolezal was being deceitful about her race, juxtaposed to a whopping 74 percent who think racial identity should be determined by birth.

The vast majority of Americans — despite recent events and increased race pimping — still believe most of their fellow countrymen aren’t racist. However, most also think race relations in this country have taken a decided turn for the worse under President Barack Obama.

While the question hasn’t been asked in years, public perception of the nation’s oldest and largest civil rights organization is underwater. A survey taken back in 2011 found that 44 percent of all voters had a favorable opinion of the NAACP, while 46 percent hold an unfavorable opinion.

The survey of 1,000 Likely U.S. Voters was conducted on June 18 and 21, 2015 by Rasmussen Reports. The margin of sampling error is +/- 3 percentage points with a 95% level of confidence.

The vast majority of American voters --

mario-draghi-eu-central-bank

Mario Draghi, President of the European Central Bank speaks during a press conference. (Photo: REUTERS)

Europe is suffering from economic stagnation caused in part by excessive fiscal burdens. So what are European policy makers doing to address this problem?

If you think the answer might have something to do with a shift to responsible fiscal policy, you obviously have no familiarity with Europe’s political elite. But if you have paid attention to their behavior, you won’t be surprised to learn that they’re lashing out at jurisdictions with better policy.

Here are a few blurbs from a story in the Economic Times.

The European Union published its first list of international tax havens on Wednesday… “We are today publishing the top 30 non-cooperative jurisdictions consisting of those countries or territories that feature on at least 10 member states’ blacklists,” EU Economic Affairs Commissioner Pierre Moscovici told a news conference. 

This is a misguided exercise for several reasons, but here are the ones that merit some discussion.

1. I can’t resist starting with a philosophical point. Low-tax jurisdictions and so-called tax havens should be emulated rather than persecuted. Their modest fiscal burdens are strongly correlated with high levels of prosperity. It’s high-tax nations that should be blacklisted and shamed for their destructive policies.

2. This new EU blacklist is particularly nonsensical because there’s no rational (even from a leftist perspective) methodology. Jurisdictions get added to the blacklist if 10 or more EU nations don’t like their tax laws. Some nations, as cited in official EU documents, even use “the level of taxation for blacklisting purposes.”

3. As has always been the case with anti-tax competition campaigns, the entire exercise reeks of hypocrisy. Big European nations such as Luxembourg and Switzerland were left off the blacklist, and the United States also was omitted (though the EU figured it was okay to pick on the U.S. Virgin Islands for inexplicable reasons).

By the way, I’m not the only person to notice the hypocrisy. Here are some excerpts from a report in the U.K.-based Guardian.

A blacklist of the world’s 30 worst-offending tax havens, published on Wednesday by the European commission, includes the tiny Polynesian island of Niue, where 1,400 people live in semi-subsistence — but does not include Luxembourg, the EU’s wealthy tax avoidance hub. …the new register does not include countries such as the Netherlands, Ireland.

And Radio New Zealand made a similar point it its report.

Anthony van Fossen, an adjunct research fellow at Australia’s Griffith University, says the list seems to be picking on smaller, easy-to-target tax havens and ignoring major ones like Singapore, Switzerland and Luxembourg. “The list is very strange in that some major havens are ignored, particularly the havens in the European Union itself, and many minor havens, including some in the Pacific Islands are highlighted.”

The more one investigates this new EU project, the more irrational it appears.

Some of the larger and more sensible European nations, including Sweden, Germany, Denmark, and the United Kingdom, didn’t even participate. Or, if they did, they decided that every jurisdiction in the world has “tax good governance.”

But other nations put together incomprehensible lists, featuring some well-known low-tax jurisdictions, but also places that have never before been considered “tax havens.” Is Botswana really a hiding spot for French taxpayers? Do Finnish taxpayers actually protect their money in Tajikistan? Is Bolivia actually a haven for the Portuguese? Do the Belgians put their funds in St. Barthelemy, which is part of France? And do Greeks put their money in Bosnia?!?

As you can see from this map, the Greeks also listed nations such as Saudi Arabia and Paraguay. No wonder the nation is such a mess. It’s governed by brain-dead government officials.

Greece-EU-Blacklist

I’ve saved the best evidence for the end. If you really want to grasp the level of irrationality in the EU blacklist, it’s even been criticized by the tax-loving (but not tax-paying) bureaucrats at the OECD. Here are some details from a report out of Cayman.

‘As the OECD and the Global Forum we would like to confirm that the only agreeable assessment of countries as regards their cooperation is made by the Global Forum and that a number of countries identified in the EU exercise are either fully or largely compliant and have committed to AEOI, sometimes even as early adopters’, the email states. …‘We have already expressed our concerns (to the EU Commission) and stand ready to further clarify to the media the position of the affected jurisdictions with regard to their compliance with the Global Forum standards’, Mr Saint-Amans and Ms Bhatia wrote.

Needless to say, being compliant with the OECD is nothing to celebrate. It means a jurisdiction has been bullied into surrendering its fiscal sovereignty and agreeing to serve as a deputy tax collector for high-tax governments.

But having taken that unfortunate step, it makes no sense for these low-tax jurisdictions to now be persecuted by the EU.

P.S. Let’s add to our collection of libertarian humor (see here and here for prior examples).

This image targets the Libertarian Party, but I’ve certainly dealt many times with folks that assert that all libertarians should “grow up” and accept big government.

Libertarian-Party-WiKi

For what it’s worth, if growing up means acquiescing to disgusting government overreach, I prefer to remain a child.

Europe is suffering from economic stagnation caused

home-sales-reuters

The National Association of Realtors said Monday existing home sales in the U.S. jumped 5.1 percent to their highest level since November 2009. The 5-1/2-year high hit in the month of May pushed resales to an annual rate of 5.35 million units, which was celebrated by FOX Business as the “latest indication that housing and overall economic activity were gathering steam in the second quarter.”

“Solid sales gains were seen throughout the country in May as more homeowners listed their home for sale and therefore provided greater choices for buyers,” Lawrence Yun, NAR chief economist said. “However, overall supply still remains tight, homes are selling fast and price growth in many markets continues to teeter at or near double-digit appreciation. Without solid gains in new home construction, prices will likely stay elevated — even with higher mortgage rates above 4 percent.”

But data from AEI’s International Center on Housing Risk suggest the tight supply cited in the existing home sales report is a symptom of a larger problem, not the cause. Government agencies are once again loosening lending practices and shifting the larger share of the mortgage lending market from large-bank lenders to non-lenders, which accounts for the lack of new construction in the market.

“One hears all the time that first-time buyers have limited access to mortgage debt. But this isn’t true,” said Stephen Oliner, co-director of AEI’s International Center on Housing Risk and senior fellow at UCLA’s Ziman Center for Real Estate. “Many first-time buyers with low FICO scores and little money down are buying homes every month.”

The National Mortgage Risk Index (NMRI) for Agency purchase loans came in at a series high 12.08 percent in April, as the market share of high-risk loans outnumbered the share of low-risk loans for the first time since tracking began.

The NMRI gained 0.2 percent from the average for the prior three months and 0.7 percent on a year-over-year basis, and is widely expected to continue the trend when the new survey is released this week. The share of high-risk Federal Housing Administration (FHA) loans and the subindex for VA loans also reached series highs.

(The May NMRI is Out, and It’s Not Good)

“With leverage unconstrained by the Qualified Mortgage regulation, increasing competition between Fannie and FHA, and eventually Freddie, will slowly introduce destabilizing risk nationally,” said Edward Pinto, the former chief credit officer for Fannie Mae and co-director of AEI’s International Center on Housing Risk. “The goal of the NMRI is to quantify and pinpoint these leverage trends in real time.”

In fact, the NAR, which is rightfully referred to at AEI as the housing lobby, isn’t disputing much of the survey’s findings.

“The return of first-time buyers in May is an encouraging sign and is the result of multiple factors, including strong job gains among young adults, less expensive mortgage insurance and lenders offering low downpayment programs,” said Yun. “More first-time buyers are expected to enter the market in coming months, but the overall share climbing higher will depend on how fast rates and prices rise.”

According to Freddie Mac, the average commitment rate for a 30-year, conventional, fixed-rate mortgage climbed in May to 3.84 percent from 3.67 percent in April but remained below 4.00 percent for the sixth straight month.

The Realtors group revised April’s sales pace up to 5.09 million units from the previously reported 5.04 million units. Economists polled by Reuters had forecast home resales rising to a 5.26 million-unit pace last month.

First-time buyers accounted for 32 percent of transactions, the largest share since September 2012 and consistent with the concerns raised by the data in the NMRI. Despite Yun’s claim, unemployment among young adults is still far higher than the national average (a disputed number), and has largely remained unchanged over the past 12 months.

Existing Home Sales by Regional

(Source: NAR)

May existing-home sales in the Northeast jumped 11.3 percent to an annual rate of 690,000, and are now 11.3 percent above a year ago. The median price in the Northeast was $269,000, which is 4.8 percent higher than May 2014.

In the Midwest, existing-home sales rose 4.1 percent to an annual rate of 1.27 million in May, and are 12.4 percent above May 2014. The median price in the Midwest was $181,900, up 9.4 percent from a year ago.

Existing-home sales in the South increased 4.3 percent to an annual rate of 2.18 million in May, and are 6.9 percent above May 2014. The median price in the South was $198,300, up 8.2 percent from a year ago.

Existing-home sales in the West climbed 4.3 percent to an annual rate of 1.21 million in May, and are 9.0 percent above a year ago. The median price in the West was $324,000, which is 10.2 percent above May 2014.

Why National Association of Realtor's existing home

Ex-Im Bank HQ

Ex-Im Bank HQ (Photo: AP)

Conservatives in the House of Representatives are closer than ever to victory over the fight to allow the reauthorization for the Ex-Im Bank to expire. With the Export-Import Bank’s charter expiring on the final day of the month and only four scheduled legislative work days left before the week-long July 4 recess, congressional aides tell PPD that GOP leaders have no plan to take up a reauthorization bill that would provide credit and financing.

“There is no chance for reauthorization this session,” one aide told PPD. “This was something supporters of expiration baked into the cake weeks ago.”

In fact, proponents of expiration in the House had long-believed that separating approval for reauthorization from “essential, must-pass” funding measures was the key to legislative victory. While the longer-term fate of Ex-Im would still be uncertain, expiration at the end of the month would undoubtedly mark a long-sought victory for House conservatives and the pro-free market Club for Growth.

“The list of conservatives who want to end the Export-Import Bank is growing,” said Club for Growth President David McIntosh. “Republican presidential candidates, congressional leaders, and committee chairmen in the House and Senate are lining up AGAINST Ex-Im. Meanwhile, there’s overwhelming support FOR Ex-Im from Hillary Clinton, Barack Obama, and liberal Democrats.”

A prior effort to slam shut what has become a revolving door of “corporate welfare” between big government and big business at the Ex-Im Bank last year narrowly failed when allies in the Chamber of Commerce, K Street and on Wall Street rallied to ensure its survival. At the House hearing on reauthorization, lawmakers were handed a friendly reminder in the form of index cards noting which companies in their districts receive funds from the bank and how many people are employed as a result of those projects.

The Democrat-organized lobbying trick came directly from Sen. Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., and allied lobbyists at corporations such as Boeing Co. (NYSE:BA) and General Electric Co. (NYSE:GE). It was also supported by typically pro-GOP business groups such as the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and National Association of Manufacturers.

But, Citizens Against Government Waste, Senate Conservatives Fund, Heritage Action for America, Generation Opportunity and the Club for Growth, all made pulling the plug on the Ex-Im Bank a top priority this session.

The Club for Growth, in particular, mobilized and garnered an unprecedented level of support for expiration. The Club’s first round of Ex-Im ads began airing in April in the congressional districts of Reps. Bill Flores (TX-17), Renee Ellmers (NC-02), Stephen Fincher (TN-08) and Buddy Carter (GA-01). The second round of ads began airing May 22 in the congressional districts of Reps. Bill Shuster (PA-9) and David McKinley (WV-1).

Ad campaigns slated for May 22 also targeted the districts of Reps. Rob Bishop (UT-1) and Chris Stewart (UT-2), but were ultimately canceled after both came out with strong statements opposing reauthorization. Reps. Alan Grayson (FL-9) and Patrick Murphy (FL-18), two potential primary opponents for the Democratic nomination in Florida’s open Senate seat in 2016, were also targeted on an issue that could prove sticky for Murphy if he decides to run. Those like Grayson on the far left have shown a propensity to ally with conservatives on expiration.

Nevertheless, the campaign kicked off just as charges of corruption at the bank began to surface.

Former Ex-Im Bank loan officer Johnny Gutierrez was charged with bribery in April for accepting cash bribes 19 different times during a period stemming from 2006 to 2013. Further, recent testimony from Mark Thorum, the assistant inspector general for inspections and evaluations at the Ex-Im Bank, and Kimberly Gianopoulos, the director of international affairs and trade at the Government Accountability Office, revealed 31 instances of alleged fraud by employees at the bank are currently under investigation.

Still, proponents of the Ex-Im Bank argue that the loans, which are funded by money borrowed from the U.S. Treasury, are necessary to gain a competitive advantage in the global economy. But even that argument hasn’t held up to scrutiny.

“Defenders of the program say it’s necessary for American exports, but only a tiny share of exports get these subsidies,” CATO economist and PPD contributor Dan Mitchell said. “It’s preposterous to claim the Ex-Im Bank plays a big role.”

Chart-Ex-Im-export-value

Though Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, is a supporter of Ex-Im, he now finds himself standing with the scandalized bank against two of the three top House Republicans — Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy of California and Majority Whip Steve Scalise of Louisiana — as well as House Ways and Means Committee Chairman Paul Ryan of Wisconsin.

“The opposition to Ex-Im knows what it is: a corrupt federal agency that hands out corporate welfare with American tax dollars,” Mr. McIntosh said.

Boehner, in a pinch, said that if Rep. Jeb Hensarling, R-Texas, a key bank opponent, moved a reauthorization bill out of the Financial Services Committee, then he would ensure a floor vote. That represented the best chance — which speaks to the bank’s dim outlook — for the speaker and other proponents to sneak in reauthorization at the last minute.

Meanwhile, the Club was planning to go down to the wire on the House floor.

The group released another round of TV ads just over a week ago in the congressional districts of Reps. Bruce Westerman (AR-4) and Phil Roe (TN-1), which aired on broadcast and cable TV in Little Rock and Fort Smith, Arkansas, and in the Tri-Cities area of northeast Tennessee.

“The Club hopes that Phil Roe and Bruce Westerman will join that opposition and stand against any reauthorization of Ex-Im,” McIntosh said of the new ad campaign, which are part of an overall $1 million effort that includes digital advertising.

At least for now, considering expiration appears imminent, Reps. Roe and Westerman are breathing a sigh of relief that they may just be able to dodge the issue.

Conservatives in the House of Representatives appear

[brid video=”10004″ player=”1929″ title=”Sen. Tim Scott Charleston Shooting “Brought our Community Together””]

Sen. Tim Scott, R-S.C., the first black American elected to the Senate since Reconstruction, appeared on Face the Nation Sunday to discuss the shooting at Emanuel AME Church in Charleston. Scott also weighed in on the meaning of the Confederate flag in his state and whether there are any legislative solutions that could prevent another attack like the one in Charleston.

“When we look for the reasons why this happened, it is hard to understand when evil is just overtaking the heart, the mind is just demented, this is obviously a case of racism,” Scott said. “His actions were driven by hatred. And that is the clear and dominant reason this happened.”

Local law enforcement officials arrested Dylann Roof last week in Shelby, North Carolina which is roughly 240 miles from Charleston, where he shot and killed 9 people during a Bible study. Roof, 21, of Colombia, S.C., apparently wanted to start a race war, something he has so far failed miserably at.

A citizen reported suspicious activity after noticing the suspect’s vehicle and the police officer who responded knew immediately that it was the person authorities were looking for. Roof, who was cooperative, was arrested and taken into custody without incident.

“Well there is no doubt that when your mind and your heart are consumed with hatred and with racist motivations, that he sought to create a ‘race war,’ according to his own words in this country,” Sen. Scott said. “What he has done for South Carolina and what he has done for Charleston is he has brought our community together. One of the beautiful scenes I have seen, etched into my memory now, was at the Morris Brown church, we had such a diverse gathering of Charlestonians and South Carolinians coming to pay respect and homage to the families.”

Sen. Tim Scott, R-SC, appeared on Face

RAND PAUL: I followed my father’s route in both medicine and politics, so we have a lot of similarities. What I respect most about my dad is honesty, genuineness. The fact that he never pandered to crowds, to try to please people, but he told them honestly the way he saw things, the way he saw the world. And he wanted to try to make it better.

Sen. Rand Paul, a 2016 Republican presidential

IMF HQ

International Monetary Fund (IMF) headquarters. (Photo: Reuters)

When I wrote the other day that the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development was the worst international bureaucracy, I must have caused some envy at the International Monetary Fund.

One can imagine the tax-free bureaucrats from the IMF, lounging at their lavish headquarters, muttering “Mitchell obviously hasn’t paid enough attention to our work.”

And they may be right. The IMF has published some new research on inequality and growth that merits our attention. I hoped it would be a good contribution to the discussion, but I was disappointed (albeit not overly surprised) to see that the authors put ideology over analysis.

Widening income inequality is the defining challenge of our time. …Equality, like fairness, is an important value.

Needless to say, they never explain why inequality is a more important challenge than anemic growth.

Moreover, they never differentiate between bad Greek-style inequality that is caused by cronyism and good Hong Kong-style inequality that is caused by some people getting richer faster than other people getting richer in a free market.

And they certainly don’t define “fairness” in an adequate fashion.

But let’s not get hung up on the rhetoric. The most newsworthy part of the study is that these IMF bureaucrats produced numbers ostensibly showing that growth improves if more income goes to those at the bottom 20 percent.

…we find an inverse relationship between the income share accruing to the rich (top 20 percent) and economic growth. If the income share of the top 20 percent increases by 1 percentage point, GDP growth is actually 0.08 percentage point lower in the following five years, suggesting that the benefits do not trickle down. Instead, a similar increase in the income share of the bottom 20 percent (the poor) is associated with 0.38 percentage point higher growth.

And this correlation leads them to make a very bold assertion.

…there does not need to be a stark efficiency-equity tradeoff. Redistribution through the tax and transfer system is found to be positively related to growth for most countries.

Followed by some policy suggestions for more class-warfare tax policy to finance additional redistribution.

…the redistributive role of fiscal policy could be reinforced by greater reliance on wealth and property taxes, more progressive income taxation… In addition, reducing tax expenditures that benefit high-income groups most and removing tax relief—such as reduced taxation of capital gains, stock options, and carried interest—would increase equity.

Those are some bold leaps in logic that the authors make. And we’ll look at some new, high-quality research on the efficiency-equity tradeoff below, but first let’s consider the IMF’s supposed empirical findings on growth and income.

Several questions spring to mind:

  • Did they cherry pick the data? Why look at the relationship between growth and income gains in the previous five years rather than one year, three yeas, or ten years?
  • Why do they assume the correlation they found in the five-year data somehow implies causation for future growth? Roosters crow before the sun comes up, after all, but they don’t cause sunrises.
  • Was there any attempt to look at other hypotheses? One thing that instantly came to my mind was the possibility that recessions often are preceded by easy-money policies that create asset bubbles. And since those asset bubbles tend to artificially enrich savers and investors with higher incomes, perhaps that explains the correlation in the IMF’s data.
  • Perhaps most important, why assume that faster income growth for the bottom 20 percent automatically means there should be more redistribution through the tax and transfer system? Maybe that income growth is the natural – and desirable – outcome of good Hong Kong-type policies?

There are all sorts of other questions that could and should be asked, but let’s now shift to the IMF’s bold assertion that their ostensible correlation somehow proves that there’s no tradeoff between growth (efficiency) and redistribution (equity).

Kevin Hassett of the American Enterprise Institute investigated the degree to which Arthur Okun was right about a tradeoff between growth and redistribution.

Forty years ago, the economist Arthur Okun wrote a seminal book with a self-explanatory title: Equality and Efficiency: The Big Tradeoff.  …Okun’s tradeoff seems to be forgotten by many on the left, who advocate expanded government spending at every turn… What is needed is some kind of controlled experiment.. When the financial crisis began, countries varied tremendously in the extent to which they redistributed income. Some, such as Ireland and Sweden, redistributed a lot; others, such as the U.S. and Switzerland, not so much. Now, seven years later, some countries have recovered smartly. Others have not. If we go back and sort countries by how much they redistributed before the crisis, how does the growth experience compare? …The vertical axis plots how much redistribution there was in each country in 2008. The horizontal axis plots the rate of per capita national-income growth that each country averaged during the four years between 2008 and 2012. In some sense, then, the chart asks the question, “To what extent does variation in the size of the welfare state in 2008 explain variation in how economies recovered from the crisis between 2008 and 2012?” …As one can see in the chart, …the data show a clear pattern: the heavy redistributors have done much worse.

And here’s Kevin’s chart, and it clearly shows the redistribution-oriented nations had relatively slow growth (the top left of the chart).

average-annual-per-capita-growth-rate-2008-2012

The bottom line is that Kevin’s hypothesis and data are much more compelling that the junky analysis from the IMF.

But you don’t need to be an expert in economic jargon or statistical analysis to reach that conclusion.

Just look around the globe. The real-world evidence is so strong that only an international bureaucrat could miss it. The nations that follow the IMF’s advice, with lots of redistribution and class-warfare taxation, are the ones that languish.

After all, Greece, Italy, and France are not exactly role models.

While jurisdictions such as Hong Kong and Singapore routinely set the standard for growth.

And nations with medium-sized welfare states, such as Switzerland, Australia, and the United States, tend to fall in the middle. We out-perform Europe’s big-government economies, but we lag behind the small-government economies.

Let’s close by looking at some additional findings from the IMF study.

I was actually surprised to see that the bureaucrats admitted that inequality (more properly defined as some people getting richer faster than others get richer) was the natural result of positive economic developments.

We find that less-regulated labor markets, financial deepening, and technological progress largely explain the rise in market income inequality in our full sample over the last 30 years.

So why, then, is “inequality” a “defining challenge”?

Needless to say, the IMF never gives us a good answer.

I also was struck by this passage from the IMF study.

Figure 18 indicates that rising pre-tax income concentration at the top of the distribution in many advanced economies has also coincided with declining top marginal tax rates (from 59 percent in 1980 to 30 percent in 2009).

And here is the chart, which the IMF would like you to believe is evidence that lower tax rates have contributed to inequality (even though the bureaucrats already admitted that natural forces have led some to get richer faster than others).

IMF-Tax-Income

Yet this chart simply shows that supply-siders were right. Reagan, Kemp, and other tax cutters argued that lower tax rates would lead rich people to earn – and declare – more taxable income.

And that’s exactly what happened!

Heck, I’ve already shared incredibly powerful data from the IRS on this occurring during the 1980s in the United States, so it’s no surprise it happened in other nations as well.

But I don’t want to be reflexively critical of the IMF. The study did have some useful data.

And there was even one very good recommendation for helping the poor by cutting back on misguided anti-money laundering laws.

Country experiences also suggest that policies such as granting exemptions from onerous documentation requirements, requiring banks to offer basic accounts, and allowing correspondent banking are useful in fostering inclusion.

Since I’ve written that anti-money laundering laws are ineffective at fighting crime while putting costly burdens on those with low incomes, I’m glad to see the IMF has reached the same conclusion.

And here’s a chart from the IMF study showing how poor people are less likely to have accounts at financial institutions.

IMF-Bank-Access

By the way, the World Bank has produced some very good research on how the poor are hurt by inane anti-money laundering rules.

So kudos to some international bureaucracies for at least being sensible on that issue.

But speaking of international bureaucracies, I started this column by joking about the contest to see which one produced the worst research with the worst recommendations.

And while the IMF’s new inequality study definitely deserves to be mocked, I must say that it’s not nearly as bad as the drivel that was published by the OECD.

So our friends in Paris can rest on their laurels, confident that they do the best job of squandering American tax dollars.

[mybooktable book=”global-tax-revolution-the-rise-of-tax-competition-and-the-battle-to-defend-it” display=”summary” buybutton_shadowbox=”true”]

CATO economist Dan Mitchell weighs new IMF

[brid video=”9973″ player=”1929″ title=”Ann Coulter vs. Rep. Luis Gutierrez and MSNBC’s Joy Reid on Bill Maher’s “]

On Friday’s “Real Time” with Bill Maher on HBO, Ann Coulter got into a shouting match with panelists Rep. Luis Gutiérrez, D-IL, and MSNBC’s Joy Reid on immigration.

On Friday's "Real Time" with Bill Maher

new orleans police suspect

Travis Boys, 33, the suspect wanted in the killing of New Orleans Police Officer Daryle Holloway, was arrested in the 9th Ward Sunday morning.

Yet, the details of the shooting death of veteran officer Daryle Holloway, 45, continue to allude investigators. According to officials, Officer Holloway was not the arresting officer, but was transporting Boys to jail when the shooting occurred. The suspect was somehow able to get to a gun when he was handcuffed behind his back, and was also able to get through the caged barrier that separated him from the front seat in the patrol car.

Holloway had been a member of the New Orleans Police Department since 1992, and was the father of three children. The New Orleans Crimestoppers organization announced a $10,000 reward for information leading to Boys’ arrest.

“As a new chief, it was the hardest thing I’ve ever had to do in my life,” Police Chief Michael Harrison said after meeting with two of Holloway’s children and his ex-wife. Harrison, who just became chief last year, said he had known Holloway for 23 years and described him as “a great police officer.”

Mr. Gamble said police are still trying to determine what weapon Boys used and how he obtained it, but do not believe Boys used the officer’s gun.

The last New Orleans Police Department officer killed in the line of duty was Officer Rodney Thomas on July 7, 2013, according to police spokesman Tyler Gamble. But even more recently, a Housing Authority police officer, James Bennett Jr., 45, was found shot to death in his patrol car.

 

 

Travis Boys, 33, the suspect wanted in

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