It begins...http://politicalticker.blogs.cnn.com/2012/11/06/boehner-lays-down-a-marker-on-taxes/?hpt=hp_t2_6
11/7/2012 1:09:00 AM
bipartisanship at it's finest
11/7/2012 1:15:46 AM
It only gets worse for the Republicans. They can either cut a deal before we go off the cliff and give up tax cuts for the wealthy or they can let it expire and have to fight against a tax cut for the middle class. It's going to the glorious final chapter to the Grover Norquist saga.
11/7/2012 1:20:41 AM
I would take another recession to destroy the Republican strategy of obstructionalism.
11/7/2012 2:48:28 PM
They'd just blame it on democrats though. That's how it works.
11/7/2012 2:55:04 PM
11/7/2012 3:01:57 PM
There is no way for Republicans to win this fight.
11/7/2012 3:45:12 PM
Should be another interesting game of brinkmanship.Hopefully Obama doesn't fold like a little bitch the way he did last time the Bush Tax Cuts came up.What we really need is comprehensive tax reform, the kind that the Bowles-Simpson commission came up with. Unfortunately, it sounds a little too much like the plan that Romney put forth, so there is no way that Obama will adopt it. Instead he is gonna stick with the absurd, loophole-ridden leaky sieve of a tax code that we have now, trying to make it more progressive while retaining all the special-interest giveaways (and probably tacking some more on for good measure). To reiterate Bowles-Simpson:
11/7/2012 3:47:36 PM
^ I support tax changes like that.
11/7/2012 5:34:30 PM
Boehner is hostage to the Tea Party, just like the rest of us. Cantor was ready to stage a coup if he gave in at all during the default battle last year. At one point it looked like Boehner was gonna lose his job because he talked about compromising with Obama during that fight.
11/7/2012 5:40:18 PM
I heard people talking about starting a "fiscal cliff" drinking game no less than 5 times at work today. Everyone decided that they would turn into raging alcoholics by next weekend.
11/7/2012 5:43:01 PM
11/9/2012 10:24:10 AM
11/9/2012 10:58:19 AM
Romney never spelled out specifically which tax credits he would reduce or phase out, for fear of pissing off special interest groups.The concept, that of comprehensive tax reform by way of reducing tax expenditures and slashing statutory rates, is shared by Romney and Bowles-Simpson. The main difference is that Bowles-Simpson advocated taxing capital gains as regular income.Comprehensive tax reform is the logical way out of this mess. Lets hope that Obama has the balls to go for it, and that the GOP is truly open to new revenue streams by way of closing loopholes, as they claim.[Edited on November 9, 2012 at 11:20 AM. Reason : 2][Edited on November 9, 2012 at 11:21 AM. Reason : 3]
11/9/2012 11:18:07 AM
11/9/2012 11:23:42 AM
Romney's plan was mathematically impossible, but he insisted that it was a starting point, up for debate. Again, lowering the rates and broadening the base is the obvious way to go. Should we reduce rates by a set percentage across the board? Probably not. Bowles-Simpson is a more nuanced approach. But the only time Obama has even paid lip service to tax reform is when talking about the corporate tax structure. We badly need across-the-board reform, focusing on reducing/eliminating loopholes. The longer the Dems cling to this awful, outdated tax code, the more out-of-touch they appear. It is horribly inefficient, laden with special-interest giveaways, and causes gross distortions in the markets it meddles in (Healthcare, housing, etc)[Edited on November 9, 2012 at 11:35 AM. Reason : 2]
11/9/2012 11:32:31 AM
What needs to be changed about the tax code?Please don't respond with "fair tax".
11/9/2012 11:34:01 AM
11/9/2012 11:39:42 AM
If you're asking me, the tax code obviously needs to be simplified to reduce inefficiency and tax avoidance. Tax expenditures simply have to be reduced, because they encourage tax avoindance and distort markets in countless ways. Business tax rates must be brought in line with the rest of the developed world, and since so many businesses utilize pass-through taxation, this means lowering the top personal income tax rate as well. Capital gains taxation needs to be reformed to bring it in line with income tax rates. Obviously when you reduce corporate and top individual tax rates, you are looking at a loss of revenue even with a reduction in tax expenditures. to make up the shortfall, a nationwide VAT of around 10% would make a lot of sense.The Bowles-Simpson "Zero Plan" is a good starting point.
11/9/2012 11:43:04 AM
11/9/2012 11:46:12 AM
Is simplicity how we decide if a tax code is good?
11/9/2012 11:46:20 AM
It's not so much that simplicity is good, it's that market-distorting tax expenditures rewarded to powerful special interests are bad. No other country in the world has such a ridiculous, inefficient tax structure that meddles so thoroughly in the markets. The US should look to Canada and northern Europe, where the tax codes are very simple and straightforward, making tax avoidance very difficult and preventing unwanted distortions in the healthcare and housing markets.
11/9/2012 11:50:29 AM
What's so great about Canada and Northern Europe that we should look at their tax code? So far you've only said "simpler = better" so far plus the standard populist "Special interests blah blah" line.I'd also point out that Northern Europe had a housing bubble too, and Canada's looking at a housing bubble much like ours right now, more revisionism? And really, you're referencing two places where universal healthcare is ubiquitous as ones that "avoid distortions in the healthcare market"? What?[Edited on November 9, 2012 at 12:05 PM. Reason : .]
11/9/2012 12:02:24 PM
11/9/2012 12:12:32 PM
It's so funny when otherwise intelligent partisans are forced to defend something that is indefensible (special interest loopholes) because their political leader does so.I'm working and I can't write a doctoral thesis on the matter. Ask any economist (across the political spectrum) about their preferred tax code structure and one of the first things that they would tell you is to get rid of the big tax expenditures. After that, they would tell you to cut or eliminate corporate tax rates, and raise top marginal individual / capital gains tax rates in response, because it's more efficient to tax people than businesses. They all advocate a national sales or VAT tax because it's more efficient to tax consumption than savings. These are all basic concepts, but somehow even the intelligent liberals on this forum get their panties in a wad when it comes to comprehensive tax reform, because at the moment it is a "GOP issue". Drop the partisan bullshit, look at the issue objectively, and you'll realize that tax reform including a reduction in tax expenditures and lowering of corporate tax rates should be the first order of business in any tax plan.Also, obligatory link to a (partisan) news source backing up my assertions:http://www.npr.org/blogs/money/2012/10/18/163106924/a-tax-plan-that-economists-love-and-politicians-hate[Edited on November 9, 2012 at 12:18 PM. Reason : 2]
11/9/2012 12:14:33 PM
11/9/2012 12:16:28 PM
11/9/2012 12:19:02 PM
11/9/2012 12:19:50 PM
11/9/2012 12:26:35 PM
I posted his exact criticisms, either respond to them directly or take your boilerplate "Herp a derp I'm against special interests and partisanship why aren't you?" posturing elsewhere.[Edited on November 9, 2012 at 12:28 PM. Reason : .]
11/9/2012 12:27:58 PM
Also, to be clear, Bowles and Simpson authored the plan, but it was rejected by the commission at large, why?edit: two more criticisms from economists (I shouldn't have to do this, but you decided to go the "but all teh economists like it!" route)http://www.nextnewdeal.net/why-fiscal-commission-does-not-serve-american-people <- very substantivehttp://www.cepr.net/index.php/blogs/beat-the-press/erskine-bowles-morgan-stanley-and-the-deficit-commission <-mostly complaining about the financial sector being untouched [Edited on November 9, 2012 at 12:38 PM. Reason : .]
11/9/2012 12:34:11 PM
Bowles-Simpson is a wide-ranging plan for deficit-reduction. Krugman naturally hates it because he hates anything that calls for deficit reduction during high unemployment. You know, Keynesianism and all. I only advocated the "Zero Plan" tax-reform solutions, so obviously Krugman's little hit piece isn't fully applicable. But lets start:
11/9/2012 12:38:14 PM
11/9/2012 12:40:54 PM
11/9/2012 12:44:06 PM
11/9/2012 12:53:57 PM
11/9/2012 1:25:56 PM
11/9/2012 1:30:19 PM
That won't work because a dollar in tax cuts is better than a dollar in spending to Republicans.Your proposal would take money out of the economy by changing tax cuts into spending.
11/9/2012 2:34:12 PM
Actually, it would change tax expenditures into spending, which is really the same thing.The GOP has signaled a willingness to increase revenues by way of reducing tax expenditures. Obviously, any reduction of tax expenditures is a de-facto tax increase, but I think most of us can agree that effective tax rates are already awfully low. Deficit reduction and pro-growth policies are typically at odds with each other, but the compromise that Dems and Repubs come up with must address both. IMO, the best way to do that is with an overhaul of the tax code that makes small and medium-sized businesses more globally-competitive, while maintaining or slightly increasing revenues. The question is who ends up paying more? Well, hopefully high-earners and those in the middle to upper-middle class who find ways to avoid income tax year after year by way of itemized tax deductions.
11/9/2012 2:46:23 PM
I can't believe you responded to that seriously.I mean, anyone arguing that a tax cut has a material difference from a subsidy when they are mathematically identical is obviously trolling.
11/9/2012 3:00:53 PM
Sorry dude. I seem to be having trouble picking up sarcasm / facetious comments as of late. Need more sleep and/or coffee.
11/9/2012 3:03:03 PM
LMFAO.... they aren't looking to fix the debt at all. HELENA, Mont. (AP) — After nearly 17 years of courtroom arguments, congressional negotiations and Indian Country bickering, hundreds of thousands of Native Americans could see the first payments of a $3.4 billion U.S. government settlement by the end of the year, plaintiffs' attorneys said Monday.http://news.yahoo.com/3-4b-indian-lawsuit-ends-disbursements-begin-002551060.html
11/27/2012 2:42:29 PM
LMAO: paying for things we need to pay for.
11/27/2012 2:48:49 PM
LMAO PAYING WITH MONEY MINTED OUT OF THIN AIR
11/27/2012 2:54:13 PM
LMAO credit makes my head hurt.
11/27/2012 3:08:02 PM
Why does it make your head hurt?
11/27/2012 3:32:19 PM
why is the United Nations doing this to us?
11/27/2012 3:33:18 PM
You let it. Next question?
11/27/2012 3:33:43 PM
if we are the United Nations why are we doing this to ourselves?!
11/27/2012 3:38:09 PM
11/27/2012 3:44:17 PM