Like France, Obama selling politics of denial

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What can Americans learn from the French presidential election? Certainly that France seems to be experiencing the politics of denial. A vote for François Hollande is a vote for fiscal denial. Look at the above chart (viaChartingTheEconomy.com).

With debt near 90% of GDP, France needs to sharply reduce the size and scope of government. What’s more, a 2010 ECB study found that overall, the EU is about maxed out when it comes to taxes: “More precisely, we find that the US can increase tax revenues by 30% by raising labor taxes but only 6% by raising capital income taxes, while the same numbers for EU-14 are 8% and 1% respectively.”

And that’s for the EU overall. France itself might well be on the wrong side of the Laffer Curve.

Yet here is the Hollande economic platform, as outlined by Morgan Stanley:

Fiscal consolidation is also a priority for the Socialist Party’s candidate, with a deficit target of 3% of GDP in 2013 and a balanced budget by 2017. Meanwhile, the new measures unveiled during the campaign would cost €20bn. These new measures and the overall fiscal effort would be funded by cuts in tax loopholes and an increase in taxes for the wealthiest households and large corporates. A broad fiscal reform would complement the adjustment of public finances. Financial institutions would be subject to several regulatory measures and taxes. In addition, some of the policies that have been implemented by the current government over the last few years would be repealed, which should increase fiscal revenue by €29bn, according to the Socialist Party’s fiscal plan. On the whole, the tax burden would increase by 1.8 percentage points, while general government spending as a ratio of GDP would decline by 2.6 percentage points.

So Holland’s 4.8% of GDP austerity plan is 40% taxes and 60% spending cuts. Nicolas Sarkozy, on the other hand, has a 5% tightening plan, 25% taxes, 75% spending cuts. A bit more like it. Really, of course, France needs to be cutting taxes and radically restructuring government.

General government spending as a share of GDP, Morgan Stanley Olivier Bizimana notes, has considerably increased over the last three decades, to 56.6% of GDP in 2010, from 46% in 1980. What’s more, the average tax burden for OECD countries was at 33.8% of GDP in 2009, almost 10 percentage points lower than in France. Indeed, says Bizimana,”the high level of tax burden, especially relative to other developed countries, suggests little scope to increase revenue in France.”

Would a vote for Barack Obama also be a vote for fiscal denial? Well, consider the following:

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So Curt, what is your solution of the fiscal problem we are in?

@Ivan:

So Ivan, Hong Kong and Singapore, are they just lucky outliers? Or do you think their booming economies may have to do with their economic policies?

Ooops. Wrong thread.

BTW, liberals live in pathological denial of reality and they almost never come out of it. They tend to go deeper and deeper. Hence their doubling and tripling down on the same policies no matter how bad they fail.

So Ivan, Hong Kong and Singapore, are they just lucky outliers? Or do you think their booming economies may have to do with their economic policies?

I say they have a very good work-ethic, among other things.

Singapore? It’s nearly a police state! Contrast that with the unlawful United States where laws are routinely ignored and your SEC is too busy watching porn 24/7 to enforce the law!!!!

Gary Chang of Hong Kong was our friend’s son’s inspiration for transforming his dorm room at college.
His and Gary’s places are quite different, in that dorms cannot have food or kitchens at that college.
So, he has a lounge and study, a bedroom and living room, a meditation/yoga room and a music room all in the space on one dorm, a bit smaller than Gary’s place.

Both men are into interior design.
But out friend’s son would never have thought of this on his own.
Thank goodness for the Hong Kong designer.
Necessity is the mother of invention, is an old phrase.
Today too many people have no real needs in the USA.
Hence they sit around with their hands out asking for more.

And in France?
The French are having to choose between Sarkosy who wants to limit immigration, the dole, handouts of all sorts, raise the retirement age past the 62 it is now and other ”austerity” policies.
His socialist opponent wants retirement age lowered to 60, more entitlements, more immigration, more taxes and a higher VAT on all.
He will turn France from being like Germany to being like Greece and Spain…..oh, goody!