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Tom Kertscher
By Tom Kertscher March 15, 2013

U.S. Rep. Paul Ryan says fiscal cliff deal is largest tax increase ever

In 2011 and 2012, conservatives maligned Obamacare as the largest tax increase in history.

Now House Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan, the Wisconsin Republican and renowned numbers cruncher, is making the same claim about a different piece of legislation.

In an interview broadcast March 3, 2013, on "Upfront with Mike Gousha," a public affairs show on WISN-TV (Channel 12) in Milwaukee, Gousha asked Ryan:

"You had said that you can’t agree to the president’s call for closing tax loopholes because it would kill tax reform. What do you mean by that?"

Alluding to the New Year’s Day 2013 compromise that averted what had been termed the "fiscal cliff," Ryan began his response by saying:

"So, as you know, the president eight weeks ago got the largest tax increase in history; he got a big tax increase just eight weeks ago. And that gives us certain revenue lines to do tax reform. We have long proposed, in all the budgets I’ve written, to plug loopholes to lower tax rates, to bring down tax rates for Americans, for families, for businesses, to create jobs, to grow the economy."  

Ryan made the same largest tax increase in history claim three days earlier in an interview on CNBC’s "Squawk Box."

But the 2012 vice-presidential candidate, a fiscal hawk, voted for the legislation that averted the fiscal cliff.

So, did that deal really impose the biggest tax increase ever?

Fiscal cliff

The bipartisan fiscal cliff agreement staved off big income tax increases on most Americans and prevented large cuts in spending for the Pentagon and other government programs.

But it also allowed income taxes to rise for the first time in two decades, in this case for those with household incomes of over $400,000 for individuals and $450,000 for couples.

The deal was a victory for Obama, who had run for re-election pledging to raise taxes on the wealthy.

Some Republicans praised the compromise for cementing income tax cuts for people below the $400,000 and $450,000 levels; those temporary lower rates, put in place under President George W. Bush, were scheduled to expire at the end of 2012.

Ryan’s evidence

Asked for evidence to back Ryan's claim, Ryan spokesman Kevin Seifert said the fiscal cliff bill is estimated to raise $650 billion over 10 years and that the "nominal dollar impact" makes it the largest-ever tax hike. He  cited a 2006 U.S. Department of Treasury paper on major tax increases.

But by nominal increases, Seifert is referring to the raw dollar amount -- which, given inflation, is not a good way for comparing tax increases over time. Especially for a period as long as "in history."

The better way is to measure a tax increase as a percentage of gross domestic product, which shows the relative impact of the increase at the time it was enacted.

Better measure

In 2011, PolitiFact Florida rated as False a claim by GOP Florida Gov. Rick Scott that Obamacare was the biggest tax increase in history; and in 2012, PolitiFact National rated as Pants on Fire a more extreme claim by Rush Limbaugh that the law was "the largest tax increase in the history of the world."

Our colleagues used 2019 as a baseline because that's when all of the tax provisions of Obama’s health care reform law will be in effect. They divided the estimated revenue increase in 2019 -- $104 billion -- by the projected gross domestic product for 2019 -- just under $21.2 trillion.

That meant the Obamacare tax increase would amount to 0.49 percent of total GDP.

Using the same Treasury paper Ryan cited, our colleagues found that Obamacare did not rank among the top five tax increases in history, but it was roughly tied for fifth among tax increases since 1968, which is considered the modern era in terms of taxation.

Three tax hikes -- in 1980, 1990 and 1993 -- all were in the ballpark with Obamacare. The largest modern-era tax hike -- at 1.09 percent of gross domestic product -- was a measure adopted in 1968.
 
So, how about the fiscal cliff?

What the experts say

We ran Ryan’s argument past three experts. Each said the fiscal cliff bill is not the largest-ever tax hike in terms of a percentage of gross domestic product.

Roberton Williams of the Tax Policy Center, a project of the Urban Institute and Brookings Institution, told us that using Ryan’s figure -- $650 billion over 10 years -- means the fiscal cliff tax hike amounts to only one-third of 1 percent (0.33) of projected GDP, which is estimated by the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office to be $206 trillion for that period (2013-2022).

That’s less than the Obamacare rate of 0.49 percent, which as we pointed out, is smaller than a number of other tax increases.

Kathy Ruffing of the left-leaning Center on Budget and Policy Priorities gave an estimate similar to Williams’. She said revenue raised by the fiscal cliff bill would amount to 0.4 percent by the fifth year.

That’s lower than measures adopted in the 1980s and 1990s under presidents Ronald Reagan, George H.W. Bush and Bill Clinton, according to an updated version of the Treasury paper Ryan cited.

William McBride of the business-backed Tax Foundation said that in "nominal dollar terms," the fiscal cliff tax hike is the largest in history, but "certainly not as a share of GDP."

Our rating

Ryan said the fiscal cliff agreement is "the largest tax increase in history."

For this type of statement, raw dollars is a virtually meaningless measure, given that it doesn’t truly compare the size of tax increases over time. And as a share of the economy, the fiscal cliff tax increase is clearly not the largest tax increase in history.

We rate Ryan’s statement False.

Our Sources

WISN-TV (Channel 12), U.S. Rep. Paul Ryan interview (at 2:45) on "Upfront with Mike Gousha," March 3, 2013

CNBC, U.S. Rep. Paul Ryan interview on "Squawk Box" (at 2:10) Feb. 28, 2013

Email interview, U.S. Rep. Paul Ryan spokesman Kevin Seifert, March 6, 2013

Email interview, Tax Policy Center Sol Price Fellow Roberton Williams, March 7, 2013

Email interview, Tax Foundation chief economist William McBride, March 7, 2013

Email interview, Center on Budget and Policy Priorities federal fiscal policy senior fellow Kathy Ruffing, March 7, 2013

U.S. Department of Treasury, "Revenue effects of major tax bills," September 2006

 

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