1981
Reagan Signs Economic Recovery Tax Act (ERTA)
Reagan Signs Economic Recovery Tax Act (ERTA)
On this day in 1981, at his California home Rancho del Cielo,
Ronald Reagan signs the Economic Recovery Tax Act (ERTA), a historic package of
tax and budget reductions that set the tone for his administration’s overall
economic policy.
During his campaign for the White House in 1980, Reagan argued
on behalf of “supply-side economics,” the theory of using tax cuts as
incentives for individuals and businesses to work and produce goods (supply)
rather than as an incentive for consumers to buy goods (demand). In Congress,
Representative Jack Kemp, Republican of New York, and Senator Bill Roth,
Republican of Delaware, had long supported the supply-side principles behind
the ERTA, which would also be known as the Kemp-Roth act. The bill, which
received broad bipartisan support in Congress, represented a significant change
in the course of federal income tax policy, which until then was believed by
most people to work best when used to affect demand during times of recession.
The ERTA included a 25 percent reduction in marginal tax rates
for individuals, phased in over three years, and indexed for inflation from
that point on. The marginal tax rate, or the tax rate on the last dollar
earned, was considered more important to economic activity than the average tax
rate (total tax paid as a percentage of income earned), as it affected income
earned through “extra” activities such as education, entrepreneurship or
investment. Reducing marginal tax rates, the theory went, would help the
economy grow faster through such extra efforts by individuals and businesses.
The 1981 act, combined with another major tax reform act in 1986, cut marginal
tax rates on high-income taxpayers from 70 percent to around 30 percent, and
would be the defining economic legacy of Reagan’s presidency.
Reagan’s tax cuts were designed to put maximum emphasis on
encouraging innovation and entrepreneurship and creating incentives for the
development of venture capital and greater investment in human capital through
training and education. The cuts particularly benefited “idea” industries such
as software or financial services; fittingly, Reagan’s first term saw the
advent of the information revolution, including IBM’s introduction of its first
personal computer (PC) and the rise or launch of such tech companies as Intel,
Microsoft, Dell, Sun Microsystems, Compaq and Cisco Systems.
Economists have argued to what degree Reagan’s economic policy
drove the boom of the 1990s, but his tax program undoubtedly set in motion
powerful forces of change that would result in both short- and long-term
economic gains. On the other hand, critics of so-called “Reaganomics” argued
that his tax cuts and the effects of steady economic growth disproportionately
benefitted the wealthy, and increased the gap between the nations’s rich and
poor.