{"id":26753,"date":"2017-12-01T15:15:00","date_gmt":"2017-12-01T23:15:00","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/spijue.wpengine.com\/news\/when-the-sparrow-meets-the-horse\/"},"modified":"2017-12-01T15:15:00","modified_gmt":"2017-12-01T23:15:00","slug":"when-the-sparrow-meets-the-horse","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/opinion\/when-the-sparrow-meets-the-horse\/","title":{"rendered":"When the sparrow meets the horse"},"content":{"rendered":"
We’ve been thinking a lot about Ronald Reagan this week.<\/p>\n
We’ve also been thinking about William Jennings Bryan.<\/p>\n
Back in 1980, when Reagan became president, he promoted the idea of trickle-down economics. It’s the notion that if you cut taxes on the rich, they’ll invest their newfound savings. Businesses will have more money for expansion and higher wages, so the tax break gets passed down to everyone in the country.<\/p>\n
It wasn’t a new idea.<\/p>\n
Back when William Jennings Bryant was running for president as a Democrat in 1896, his Republican rival, William McKinley (whose name was attached to a mountain around here) had the same idea.<\/p>\n
Bryant didn’t buy McKinley’s theory. Bryant’s allies referred to McKinley’s idea as the “horse and sparrow theory.”<\/p>\n
If you feed a horse enough oats, some of those oats are going to pass through the horse and become food for the sparrows.<\/p>\n
That analogy’s been rattling around this week as we watch the U.S. Senate move toward a vote on a sweeping tax cut for the rich. Sure, there’s some cuts for us sparrows, but most of the oats are going to the horses.<\/p>\n
We’re looking at a tax bill that will cost federal taxpayers more than $1.4 trillion over the next decade. Most of that money will go to people making more than $100,000 per year. Both figures come from the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office<\/a>.<\/p>\n U.S. Sen. Dan Sullivan, R-Alaska, points out that tax cuts will boost the nation’s economy, and we don’t argue with him there. We’d simply point out that the boost doesn’t in any way equal what this tax cut will cost. Horses eat a lot, after all.<\/p>\n