How to lose an election by being too smart.

I like Elizabeth Warren.

I like her tireless energy. I like her desire to narrow the Gap between the rich and the rest. I like her compassion and her morality. I like her intelligence.

What a refreshing difference between her and the current occupant of the White House.

But it may be her high intelligence that costs her the election.

Consider these headlines:

Elizabeth Warren Wants To Pay for Medicare for All With a $9 Trillion Tax That Will Hit the Middle Class
Warren says it’s not a tax. But what else would you call a requirement that employers send money to the federal government to finance a public program?
And:
Elizabeth Warren’s Medicare for All Dilemma
And:
Elizabeth Warren’s Tax-Hike Evasion
And:
How Warren’s Medicare for All plan could impact the middle class financially
By Tami Luhby, CNN

Sen. Elizabeth Warren has promised that she won’t raise taxes on the middle class “by one penny” to finance “Medicare for All.”

The Massachusetts Democrat’s funding proposal, now key to her 2020 platform, is chock full of new levies on employers, corporations, the wealthy and financial firms.

She highlights that people would save $11 trillion that they would have spent on premiums, deductibles and co-pays over the next decade — but that benefit isn’t completely tax-free. Americans of all incomes would fork over $1.4 trillion more in taxes over 10 years.

Buried in the footnotes of the proposal is the assumption that earnings would be taxed at higher marginal income tax rates due to the full repeal of the 2017 Republican tax cuts. The proposal assumes marginal tax rates would rise by 2.3 percentage points.

Warren has two problems:

  1. She has a tax plan to solve the “How will you pay for it” non-problem, and
  2. Her tax plan is so complex and convoluted, few people can understand it, and fewer yet agree with its calculations.

So this mysterious, dark cave of data not only steals attention away from her plan’s coverage benefits, but it also inserts suspicion that she is using fiscal sleight-of-hand to hide something.

This is a bad sign for the passage of a program that actually will use zero tax dollars (because unlike state and local taxes, federal taxes do not fund anything).

The U.S. federal government uniquely is Monetarily Sovereign. It has the unlimited ability to create its own sovereign currency, the U.S. dollar.

When Warren is asked, “How will you pay for it,” her response should be:

“We’ll pay for it the same way we are paying for the GOP’s increases in military spending and tax cuts for the rich. We’ll pay for it the same way we pay for White House lawn mowing and Air Force 1, Congressional travel and meals, and Supreme Court robes:

The federal government simply will push a computer key.”

Then she can quote:

Alan Greenspan: “A government cannot become insolvent with respect to obligations in its own currency.”

Ben Bernanke: “The U.S. government has a technology, called a printing press (or, today, its electronic equivalent), that allows it to produce as many U.S. dollars as it wishes at essentially no cost.” 

St. Louis Federal Reserve: “As the sole manufacturer of dollars, whose debt is denominated in dollars, the U.S. government can never become insolvent, i.e., unable to pay its bills. In this sense, the government is not dependent on credit markets to remain operational.”

The federal government creates dollars, ad hoc, every time it spends dollars. Unlike states, counties, cities, businesses, you, and me, the federal government needs no income.

The government creates new dollars, ad hoc, every time it spends dollars. It neither needs nor uses tax dollars, nor does it borrow.

Why does the government levy taxes? Two reasons, both having to do with control:

  1. To control the economy, it taxes what it wishes to limit, and gives tax breaks to what it wishes to encourage.
  2. To control you by making you believe dollars are scarce so you will not demand free benefits. By impoverishing taxpayers, and then doling out dollars as it sees fit, the federal government exerts powerful control over the lives of taxpayers.

Tami Luhby’s article continues:

Warren’s campaign told CNN that she only supports repealing the tax cuts for the wealthy and big corporations — not middle-class families — and doing so would have no material effect on the revenue estimate.

Tax cuts for corporations benefit the economy by leaving more growth dollars in the economy, and by helping businesses grow. Eliminating those tax cuts is anti-growth.

Warren proposes an anti-growth solution to the “How will you pay for it” non-problem.

Another provision of Warren’s plan — which calls on employers to foot a large share of the bill — could also affect the middle class in an indirect way, say some economic experts and opponents.

Under her proposal, employers would no longer pay premiums to private insurers, which on average cost them more than $14,500 annually, on average, for family coverage.

Instead, companies would write a check to the federal government for 98% of their current health insurance tab to foot nearly half bill for Medicare for All.

She calls this $8.8 trillion levy an “employer Medicare contribution.”

When employers pay premiums to private insurers, the growth dollars stay in the economy, but when employers pay taxes to the federal government, those dollars disappear from the economy.

Here, again, Warren’s plan is anti-growth.

Workers typically receive lower wages because companies factor tax free health insurance costs into their total compensation. So if employers no longer had to pay for health coverage, they would use some of the savings to boost taxable salaries.

“She has found a clever way to make middle-income people finance a portion of government health insurance without paying a direct tax,” Gleckman said. “But make no mistake, they still will be paying.”

This isn’t exactly true. Both salaries and healthcare costs are tax-deductible to corporations. So from that standpoint, the plan is a wash.

But salaries require (unnecessarily) FICA payments from employers and from employees. So employers and employees both would pay more FICA tax to the government, and this represents a net dollar loss to the economy.

Former Vice President Joe Biden, in particular, has attacked her on this point. His campaign calls this provision “a new tax of nearly $9 trillion that will fall on American workers.”

Other experts, however, counter that the employer Medicare contribution would not prompt companies to further diminish workers’ wages.

“Employers are already paying this in the form of premium contributions to employer plans,” tweeted Topher Spiro, vice president for health policy at the Center for American Progress, which supports a universal coverage model that would retain an employer-based insurance option.

“This is just redirecting the premiums to Medicare.”

Redirecting premiums from private insurers to Medicare removes growth dollars from the economy.

Warren and Sanders insist on eliminating the employer-based option. The byzantine tax maze plus the unexplained elimination of private insurance are together enough to make taxpayers throw up their hands and say, “Forget it.”

Smart people may not understand how less intelligent people “don’t get it.” Perhaps her brilliance has made Warren forget the adage, “KISS. Keep It Simple, Stupid.”

Or, perhaps she believes the populace is too stupid to understand the simple, Monetary Sovereignty truth that the federal government can pay for Medicare, without taxes and without inflation.  

Because Donald Trump is a low-IQ con-artist, he is most adept at keeping things simple — by lying in simplistic terms rather than by explaining the more complex reality.

Drain the swamp,” “Build the wall,” “Make America great again,” “Fake news” all are designed to appeal even to the intellectually impoverished.

Those who serve Trump report that he has difficulty comprehending even one complete paragraph. That being the case, he creates his communications to fit Twitter — something brief enough even he and the voters can understand.

To communicate with the voters, and win the election, Warren should attempt this bit of simplicity by saying: “We’ll eliminate FICA, and give you free, no-deductible Medicare and long-term disability.”

Or better yet:No FICA; Free Medicare”, and produce some baseball caps with the letters, “NFFM.”

Or, she can keep turning herself inside out, and look dishonest trying to “prove” she can pay for a trillion-dollar program without federal deficit spending or tax increases.

I hope her honesty will prevail.

Rodger Malcolm Mitchell
Monetary Sovereignty
Twitter: @rodgermitchell
Search #monetarysovereignty Facebook: Rodger Malcolm Mitchell

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The most important problems in economics involve:

  1. Monetary Sovereignty describes money creation and destruction.
  2. Gap Psychology describes the common desire to distance oneself from those “below” in any socio-economic ranking, and to come nearer those “above.” The socio-economic distance is referred to as “The Gap.”

Wide Gaps negatively affect poverty, health and longevity, education, housing, law and crime, war, leadership, ownership, bigotry, supply and demand, taxation, GDP, international relations, scientific advancement, the environment, human motivation and well-being, and virtually every other issue in economics.

Implementation of Monetary Sovereignty and The Ten Steps To Prosperity can grow the economy and narrow the Gaps:

Ten Steps To Prosperity:

1. Eliminate FICA

2. Federally funded Medicare — parts A, B & D, plus long-term care — for everyone

3. Provide a monthly economic bonus to every man, woman and child in America (similar to social security for all)

4. Free education (including post-grad) for everyone

5. Salary for attending school

6. Eliminate federal taxes on business

7. Increase the standard income tax deduction, annually. 

8. Tax the very rich (the “.1%”) more, with higher progressive tax rates on all forms of income.

9. Federal ownership of all banks

10. Increase federal spending on the myriad initiatives that benefit America’s 99.9% 

The Ten Steps will grow the economy and narrow the income/wealth/power Gap between the rich and the rest.

MONETARY SOVEREIGNTY

Democrats’ political suicide

There were times when I thought Donald Trump was politically suicidal with his public philandering, his easily disproved lies, his blatant ignorance, his financial profiting from the Presidency, his nepotism, his sucking up to communists, and on and on.

But apparently, his “religious” followers admire philandering, lying, ignorance, criminal profiting, nepotism, communism, etc. So Trump survives.

Lately, I have realized that it is the Democrats who are politically suicidal. The Democrats have the marvelous ability to take a good idea, a popular idea — health care for everyone — and muck it up into a barely recognizable mess, until they now are on the defensive about something that should be a lay-down winner for them.

As readers of this blog well know: The federal government’s finances are not like state and local governments’ finances. 

Image result for bernanke and greenspan
It’s our little secret. Don’t tell the people we don’t use their tax dollars.

Ben Bernanke: “The U.S. government (can) produce as many U.S. dollars as it wishes at essentially no cost.”

Alan Greenspan: “A government cannot become insolvent with respect to obligations in its own currency.”

St. Louis Federal Reserve: “As the sole manufacturer of dollars, whose debt is denominated in dollars, the U.S. government can never become insolvent, i.e.,unable to pay its bills. In this sense, the government is not dependent on (borrowing) to remain operational.”

Unlike state and local governments: 

  1. The federal government has a sovereign currency, the U.S. dollar, over which it has total control.
  2. The federal government cannot unintentionally run short of its own sovereign currency.
  3. The federal government neither needs nor uses tax dollars.
  4. The federal government does not borrow.

Those four, simple truths are absolutely basic to economics. Yet they seem not to be understood by the vast majority of Americans, even including media writers and university economists — and especially not understood by the legions of Democrats chasing glory via the Presidency.

The following article demonstrates the Democrats’ suicidal ignorance:

Sanders admits he would raise taxes on the middle class to pay for programs
Kadia TubmanReporter,Yahoo News•June 27, 2019

Sen. Bernie Sanders, challenged at Thursday night’s Democratic presidential debate on how he would pay for universal health care and his other proposed programs, admitted income taxes on the middle class would have to go up — but maintained that the savings in medical expenses would more than offset the tax hike.

Sanders, who took the first question from NBC correspondent Savannah Guthrie, talked about his Medicare for All proposal for his allotted minute.

But when Guthrie followed up and pressed him about taxes on the middle class, he conceded, “Yes, they will pay more in taxes.”

If Sanders’s version (or any other candidate’s version) of Medicare for All were proposed by a state governor or a city mayor, the above answer would be correct. Additional taxes would be needed to pay the cost of the medical services.

But apparently, neither Sanders nor any other candidate (nor any Republican, for that matter) knows or admits to knowing that federal finances are completely, totally, 180 degrees different from state and city finances.

The federal government uniquely has total control over the U.S. dollar, cannot unintentionally run short of dollars, neither needs nor uses tax dollars, and does not borrow.

The U.S. federal government could finance even the most liberal, generous version of Medicare for All, at the tap of a computer key. No tax dollars involved.

Sanders said, “Health care in my view is a human right and we have got to pass a Medicare for All single-payer system. “Under that system, [the] vast majority of the people in this country will be paying significantly less for health care than they are right now.”

Not only is health care a “human right,” but it is an economic imperative for any nation hoping to compete and grow — certainly as much an imperative as military defense and effective government.

Yet there is Sanders, essentially hat in hand, pleading for universal health care on the basis of cost savings, when in reality cost is not a real issue. It is a fake issue put forth either in ignorance or in malicious intent, depending on one’s politics.

Quite simply, there is no financial reason why any American should be forced to pay one cent for health care insurance — either via taxes or via premium payments.

And if after all these months of researching and developing his Medicare for All plans, Sanders still has not learned this, he is mentally unfit to be left alone with a sharp object.

But it continues. Sanders also said:

“I believe that education is the future for this country and that is why I believe we must make public colleges and universities tuition-free and eliminate student debt, and we do that by placing a tax on Wall Street.”

“Every proposal that I have brought forth is fully paid for.”

Sanders believes (!) education is the future for this county?  He believes so? What a relief that he believes something so obvious, that American states, counties, and cities have been funding elementary, high school, and even some college education, for centuries.

Unfortunately, states, counties, and cities are not Monetarily Sovereign, so they must have some form of income (taxes, fees, tourism, borrowing, etc.) in order to spend.

The federal government, being unique, is not similarly constrained. Yet Sanders, a federal politician, doesn’t recognize this difference. Tragic.

Sanders babbled on:

“People who have health care under Medicare for All will have no premiums, no deductibles, no copayments, no out of pocket expenses. Yes, they will pay more in taxes, but less in health care for what they get.”

Then the Yahoo News reporter added her dollop of economic ignorance by quoting the Associated Press:

Still, taxes would significantly increase as “the government takes on trillions of dollars in health care costs now covered by employers and individuals, the Associated Press fact-checked.

“Independent studies estimate the government would be spending an additional $28 trillion to $36 trillion over 10 years, although Medicare for All supporters say that’s overstating it.

How those tax increases would be divvied up remains to be seen, as Sanders has not released a blueprint for how to finance his plan.

Note how the media automatically and wrongly translate “spending an additional $28 trillion to $36 trillion” into “tax increases.”

(Does that also mean federal tax cuts require federal spending cuts?)

There is zero relationship between federal spending and taxes. Again, the pretense is that federal finances are like state and local finances, where spending is funded by taxes.

Sen. Michael Bennet, who was the last candidate to earn a spot on the debate stage, took a shot at Sanders on taxes.

Bennet said he believed in getting to universal health care. “I believe the way to do that is by finishing the work we started with Obamacare and creating a public option that every family and every person in America can make a choice for their family about whether they want a public option which for them would be like having Medicare for All or whether they want to keep their private insurance. I believe we will get there much more quickly if we do that.”

“Bernie mentioned the taxes that we would have to pay, because of those taxes, Vermont rejected Medicare for All,” he added. Sanders shook his head in response.

If by “public option” Bennet means people should be given the choice between free, comprehensive, no deductible Medicare and long-term care vs. paying for private insurance, sure. Why not? That is exactly the choice people should be given.

Of course, the result is a given. Perhaps a dozen people in America would choose to pay for private insurance.

But then, the Democrats’ stupidity continues:

When asked which candidates would abolish private health insurance in favor of a government-run plan, only Sanders and Harris raised their hands.

Since the words “abolish private health care insurance” instantly click the insanity button in America, two Democrats dive right in and say, “Yes, that is what we would do.”

OMG! Why?

“Everybody who says Medicare for All, every person in politics who allows that phrase to escape their lips has a responsibility to explain how you’re actually supposed to get from here to there,” said South Bend, Ind., Mayor Pete Buttigieg.

“I would call it Medicare for All Who Want It.”

Buttigieg said he would take parts of Medicare and give people an option to buy into it, providing “a very natural glide path to the single-payer environment.”

“Parts of Medicare”? Which parts would you leave out? Even Medicare itself is insufficient.

It has deductibles and partial payments, which are why many people pay for Medicare Supplement insurance. And it doesn’t cover pharmaceuticals, which is why people pay for Part D coverage.

And don’t even mention long-term care coverage, which Medicare doesn’t provide, and which even frightfully expensive private insurance covers only partially.

So add Buttigieg to the list of politicians who either don’t know what they are talking about or don’t want to give you the facts.

Bottom line, the federal government has the unlimited power to pay for comprehensive, no deductible health care insurance, including pharmaceuticals and long term care — and it can do so by pressing a computer key.

This whole charade results from the mean-spirited, selfishness of Gap Psychology  (see: https://mythfighter.com/2018/04/06/how-does-gap-psychology-affect-you/) combined with flat-out ignorance of federal finances, and you, the public, are the patsies.

Cost is not the issue. Coverage is the issue — the only issue.

Even if you have no background in economics you should realize that federal spending is not funded by taxes. Didn’t the GOP massively cut taxes on the rich while increasing federal spending. That alone should have given you a clue.

Sorry folks, but ignorance has its penalties. Pay up.

Rodger Malcolm Mitchell
Monetary Sovereignty
Twitter: @rodgermitchell
Search #monetarysovereigntyFacebook: Rodger Malcolm Mitchell

…………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………..

The most important problems in economics involve the excessive income/wealth/power Gaps between the richer and the poorer.

Wide Gaps negatively affect poverty, health and longevity, education, housing, law and crime, war, leadership, ownership, bigotry, supply and demand, taxation, GDP, international relations, scientific advancement, the environment, human motivation and well-being, and virtually every other issue in economics.

Implementation of The Ten Steps To Prosperity can narrow the Gaps:

Ten Steps To Prosperity:

1. Eliminate FICA

2. Federally funded Medicare — parts a, b & d, plus long-term care — for everyone

3. Provide a monthly economic bonus to every man, woman and child in America (similar to social security for all)

4. Free education (including post-grad) for everyone

5. Salary for attending school

6. Eliminate federal taxes on business

7. Increase the standard income tax deduction, annually. 

8. Tax the very rich (the “.1%”) more, with higher progressive tax rates on all forms of income.

9. Federal ownership of all banks

10. Increase federal spending on the myriad initiatives that benefit America’s 99.9% 

The Ten Steps will grow the economy, and narrow the income/wealth/power Gap between the rich and you.

MONETARY SOVEREIGNTY