Unit 1.5 Flashcards
What immediate action did Reagan take after coming into the Presidency?
- Control government spending.
- Reduce government involvement.
- Cut taxes.
What did Reagan do within 3 days of coming into Presidency?
- Sacked many White House staff members.
- Put a federal government hiring freeze in place.
- Told all departments there was a freeze in office furnishing and equipment.
- Cut their travel expenses by 15%.
- Used a series of executive orders to set up new advisory groups which reported directly to him on how to cut ‘big government’.
- However, the financial savings were small and advisory groups don’t make any changes.
What did Reagan present to congress upon his first meeting with them in 1981?
- Reagan wanted to present his whole budget policy through to 1984 as a single bill.
- He also wanted to present a tax bill within the same session.
- His Council of Economic Advisors (CEA) had no time to follow the usual procedure meaning that Congress had to vote on the whole package of spending cuts.
What did it mean for the administration now that Congress had to vote on the whole package of spending cuts?
- The Administration would have approval for all its measures and control over the timetable up to 1984.
What was Reagan’s plan for economic recovery?
- Cutting the federal deficit.
- Personal and business tax reductions.
- Deregulation.
- Planned control of the money supply.
What bill did Reagan put in place in order to cut the federal deficit and what was the issue with this?
- It was accompanied by a budget bill and a proposal for cuts on domestic spending.
- The plan was so hastily put together that it had a number of errors.
What would accompany Reagan’s plan to reduce personal and business tax?
- Accompanied by the Economic Recovery Tax Act of 1981.
What did Reagan plan to remove in order to deregulate?
- Remove federal control in industry, state and local government.
What did Reagan intend to keep down in order to control the money supply?
- He wanted to keep inflation down while expanding the economy.
How did Reagan get his budget legislation passed?
- Republican majority in the House of Representatives meant Reagan only needed to win the support of 26 Democrats.
- This made pushing through the budget and the tax easier.
- The senate passed the budget and it was sent to the House and was passed after some revision.
What was the one change in Reagan’s tax legislation?
- The Senate passed it with only one change.
- It cut the tax reduction for personal tax from 30% to 25%.
Why was getting the Tax legislation passed more of a challenge for Reagan?
- Democrats felt they had been manipulated over the budget and saw the tax bill as a fight over control of the house.
- Democrats made significant changes to the bill.
- White House offered tax concessions to some Democrats to try swing the vote.
- Democrats counter-offered incentives in areas they controlled.
- Process became an undignified scramble over concessions.
What did the 1981 Economic Recovery Tax Act (ERTA) establish?
- Cut marginal tax by 23% over 3 years.
- Linked the tax bands to inflation.
- Applied to all tax bands (Those paying the highest tax benefitted the most).
- Business tax rates were reduced and various business tax breaks were offered, skewed to favour small businesses.
What was the 1981 Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act (ORA) and what did it propose?
- Proposes a variety of tax cuts that will take $35 billion out of federal spending.
- Initial bill presented to the White House proposed $45 billion-worth cuts.
What was the 1981 Economic Recovery Act (ERTA)?
- Cuts marginal income tax by 23% over 3 years.
- Links tax bands to inflation and offers other incentives.
What did the 1982 Tax Equity and Financial Responsibility Act (TEFRA) make changes to and what did it tighten up?
- Makes changes to the budget in response to the economic situation.
- Tightened up tax rules especially for businesses.
What did the 1986 Consolidated Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act (COBRA) do to the budget and where were costs moved to?
- Revises the budget in many minor ways to save the federal government money.
- Moves costs to state or private bodies (the most significant change shifts responsibility for healthcare payments from federal gov to employer).
What was the 1986 Tax Reform Act?
- Revises the tax codes.
- Reduces the number of tax brackets.
- Supposed to close a lot of tax evasion loopholes and ease the pressure on poorer families.
What were Reagan’s policies of tax cuts and money supply control intended to do?
- Stop inflation.
- Reduce unemployment.
- Increase personal wealth.
- Increase productivity.
- Encourage personal saving and investing.
- Encourage businesses and service providers to produce more.
- Wanted the federal deficit to fall.
Did Reagan’s policies stop inflation and unemployment?
- While ORA & ERTA were going through Congress, Reagan also put pressure on the Federal Reserve Board (FRB) to place tighter restrictions on the money.
- The FRB placed even tighter restrictions than the White House demanded and when unemployment was high Reagan’s administration refused to lift restrictions.
Did Reagan’s policies stop inflation and unemployment? NEGATIVES
- There was a conflict of interest between the FRB and the White House.
- Money supply being restricted too much runs the risk of deflation.
- Money supply restriction led to a sharp rise in inflation rates.
- Hurt industries that bought supplies on credit.
- Many businesses were badly hit.
- Reagan came into power in the middle of a recession.
Did Reagan’s policies stop inflation and unemployment?
POSITIVES
—UNEMPLOYMENT GRAPH—
- Inflation began to fall.
- Went from 11.3% in 1979, to 13.5% in 1980, to 6.2% in 1982.
- By 1986 inflation had never reached double figures again and spent most of its time at under 5%.
Did Reagan’s policies increase personal wealth?
- Everyone agrees that the tax cuts made people richer.
- Debate arises over which sectors of the population became rich.
- Some historians argue that the rich became richer and the poor did not, the cut in the tax bracket was the deepest for rich and therefore they benefitted the most.
- Other historians argue that the tax cuts hurt the rich the most and the poor the least and that the tax payment of the rich helped the revival of the economy.
Did Reagan’s policies increase productivity?
- Yes.
- It increased from -0.1 output per worker per hour