The benefits of tax cuts has nothing to do with encouraging consumption. Well, ok, maybe the theory is that tax cuts get you out of a recession by increasing consumption, but that is largely bullshit. The main purpose of tax cuts is to boost productivity, which works best during normal economic conditions. Flyin Ryan, nothing in your link contradicts my statistics: the deficit has been less than GDP growth every year, so every year the relative size of the national debt has fallen. If that isn't good stewardship then I don't know what is.
4/3/2007 12:18:23 AM
i thought lowering tax rates meant people had more money to spend. is that not correct?also,
4/3/2007 12:22:01 AM
^^Exactly.Revenues are way up since the GW tax cuts. You can fault Bush and the previous congress for irresponsible spending, but his tax cuts have boosted the economy while maintaining a healthy revenue stream for the government. A shrinking deficit in the face of that bloated budget speaks for itself.^Lowering taxes helps the economy in many ways. Of course people have more money to spend, but they also have more money to save and invest, which is much more beneficial in the long run. The reason that cutting taxes on the rich is so effective in boosting the economy is that those rich people invest their savings, which leads to an economic boom and more revenue for the government. A side effect that everybody bitches about is that the rich get richer faster than the middle-class and the poor.Your graph is somewhat outdated. It should reflect the shrinking of the deficit over the last 2 years. [Edited on April 3, 2007 at 12:28 AM. Reason : 2]
4/3/2007 12:23:01 AM
4/3/2007 10:13:41 AM
No, it means high tax rates dissuade individuals from productive behavior.
4/3/2007 10:38:21 AM
So by tax avoidance behavior, you literally meant stopping production, because making no profit is better than making some profit?
4/3/2007 10:43:40 AM
No, they engage is different behavior which, while less productive for society as a whole, has the benfit of producing income that someway avoids full taxation. Just a few examples:Raising taxes diverts capital away from legitimate business and towards: tax-free government bonds, illegal enterprises, illegal employment, capital intensive enterprises, overseas tax havens, tax-code favored industries, etc.
4/3/2007 10:58:17 AM
4/3/2007 11:05:07 AM
Yes, we can combat it quite easily: just reduce the tax rate and people will halt their tax avoidance behavior.
4/3/2007 11:46:21 AM
4/3/2007 11:51:42 AM
From my understanding all tax regimes break down after awhile. Some do this by engendering illegality, such as a high sales tax, but most do it by distorting economic activity to unproductive ends, such as the income tax. Of course, we know exactly how to get around the problems associated with any given tax: have multiple forms of taxation. We already do this: local governments tax property, our state has a sales tax, and the fed. has an income tax. If we tried to fund all the government we have on a single tax the disruption would be crippling, but divided amongst four taxes the disruptions are manageable. Now, the evidence states that income taxes above 40% become noticeably disruptive, but there is little evidence that a rate below 20% does much good at all. As such, if we need more money (you did say higher rates) I would suggest we seek that revenue elsewhere as our existing tax regimes are largely tapped out. A currently untapped source would be a Value-Added-Tax, which does not become unduly disruptive until the 40% range, almost double the point at which a sales tax breaks down (around 20%).
4/3/2007 12:43:25 PM
And of course lowering spending is out of the question, right?
4/3/2007 4:15:56 PM
4/3/2007 6:45:57 PM
^^In theory it is possible, but the fact remains that spending has to increase or else you'll end up with an economic catastrophe.
4/3/2007 6:48:06 PM
^ And what makes you say that? Your statement doesn't seem to make any sense. Every dollar the government does not spend is another dollar it does not need to borrow.
4/3/2007 7:34:24 PM
4/3/2007 7:40:58 PM
I read nothing there to contradict my statements:"foreigners are investing $800 billion more in the U.S. than Americans are investing overseas."
4/3/2007 7:54:59 PM
^ I now know how businessmen in 1928 sounded. "Our financial outlook is good. Look at this graph of the last four years."Blast from the past: http://www.brentroad.com/message_topic.aspx?topic=425058[Edited on April 3, 2007 at 8:09 PM. Reason : .]
4/3/2007 8:00:45 PM
No, businessmen in 1929 sounded exactly like businessmen in 2000 sounded: price per earnings ratios of 100 will be normal in the future, being a "New Economy" and all.
4/3/2007 8:07:01 PM
haven't the democrats been promising to raise tax rates for the upper tax brackets for a while now?also, at least they aren't running a severe deficit anymore that will cause severe inflation like under nixon.
4/7/2007 1:27:50 AM
Sorry, Keynes was wrong, inflation is not driven by Government spending, borrowing, or taxation. Inflation is a product of monetary policy which is set by the Federal Reserve, nothing more, nothing less.
4/7/2007 9:31:06 AM