Key Takeaways:
- Murray Sabrin argues federal spending, not tax rates, is the real fiscal issue
- The response challenges Laffer and Moore's claim that lower rates boost revenue
- Debate comes as US debt approaches 100% of GDP within the decade
Key Takeaways:

A prominent supply-side economist is pushing back against the notion that lower tax rates automatically generate higher revenue, arguing instead that unchecked federal spending — not tax policy — is the primary threat to US fiscal health.
Murray Sabrin, an associated scholar at the Ludwig von Mises Institute, published a letter in the Wall Street Journal on June 18 responding to a June 11 op-ed by Arthur Laffer and Stephen Moore that championed the 1986 tax reform bill spearheaded by the late Sen. Bob Packwood. Laffer and Moore argued that lower tax rates, the hallmark of the Packwood reform, historically generate higher tax revenues through economic growth.
"The deeper issue isn't tax rates — it's federal spending," Sabrin wrote. "Every dollar Washington spends is a dollar removed from the private sector, the true engine of prosperity, innovation and job creation."
The exchange reignites a decades-old debate over fiscal policy just as the US approaches the 250th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence. Sabrin argued that lawmakers should not view rising tax revenues from economic growth as an invitation to expand government further. "A growing economy should require less government intervention as private-sector employment and opportunity expand," he wrote.
The Spending Side of the Ledger
Sabrin's critique targets what he describes as a structural dependency on federal dollars. "Today, tens of millions of Americans, businesses and institutions depend on federal dollars for income and benefits," he wrote, arguing this reliance "is far removed from the spirit of independence that animated the American Revolution."
The Laffer-Moore thesis — that rate cuts can be self-financing through growth — has been a cornerstone of Republican tax policy since the 1980s. The 1986 Tax Reform Act, signed by President Ronald Reagan, collapsed 14 tax brackets into two and lowered the top marginal rate to 28% from 50%. Proponents point to subsequent revenue growth as validation, while critics note that spending growth outpaced revenue gains in the years that followed.
Sabrin called for a "constitutional budget that phases out unauthorized federal programs," with the goal of "restoring economic independence by reducing Washington's reach and allowing citizens to keep more of what they earn while relying less on the government for their livelihoods."
What's at Stake
The debate carries implications for the next round of fiscal negotiations. The Congressional Budget Office has projected that federal debt held by the public will exceed 100% of GDP within the current decade, driven primarily by mandatory spending on Social Security, Medicare and interest payments. Tax policy alone, Sabrin's argument suggests, cannot resolve the structural imbalance without corresponding spending restraint.
The exchange also highlights a broader philosophical divide: whether fiscal policy should prioritize tax-side incentives for growth or spending-side discipline to shrink government's share of the economy. With the 2026 midterm elections approaching and the debt ceiling set to return as a legislative flashpoint, the spending-versus-taxes debate is likely to intensify.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.