Xequecal wrote:
I'm not even talking about the 39.6% vs. 35% tax rate that's being discussed in Congress now. Obama's official debt commission and two other independent ones all came up with similar recommendations - shift the tax burden down. It's deplorable.
Why is it deplorable? You don't pay taxes. Other posters who would make the same comment, don't pay taxes either. For the majority of Americans, even their payroll taxes are returned in the form of credits and other deductions. So how on earth are we going to shift the tax burden up? People keep telling me the rich need to pay more and more and more, while the definition of rich keeps inching ever and ever lower. That said, Obama's Official Debt Commission has the right idea. You actually do need to shift some of the tax burden down and eliminate entitlement programs. It's funny how you ignore the parts about functionally eliminating social security, hamstringing Medicare, and effectively repealing the Health Care Reform Act. It's also amusing that if you look at the number suggested, we're talking about approximately $500 a year from 220,000,000 Americans: or another trillion dollars in real revenue at a truly dispersed rate.
Xequecal wrote:
All three advised reducing or eliminating tax breaks and loopholes in exchange for lowering the highest marginal income tax rate and either getting rid of or reducing the impact of the Alternative Minimum Tax, AKA the wealth tax. And somehow, they all concluded that drastically lowering taxes on the group that pays most of the taxes will somehow generate more revenue and generate jobs, despite the fact that shifting the tax burden down creates a huge disincentive to work at all.
Except, again, you didn't real the entirely of their suggestions which are some of the most economically conservative things to come out of Washington in decades and very reminiscent of that Democratic Poster Child John F. Kennedy. More to the point, they didn't conclude anything about drastically lowering taxes on the rich, as they suggested a top marginal of 30% and elimination of the Capital Gains Tax discount which would push revenues up (or, more likely, reduce overall investiture). While there are some problems with the recommendations, they are neither Keynesian nor particularly problematic in any sense you think. As for creating disincentives to work, that's already the province of government policy. We currently have some 5 million Americans on extremely long term unemployment; these people will never hold a paying job again in their lives. Your chance at future employment drops geometrically every week after 13 weeks of collecting unemployment benefits.
Xequecal wrote:
And Coro, I hate to break it to you, but the government effectively does control all the money in every country in the world. If they want money from you, and you won't give it up, they can simply ignore you and print more for the same effect.
Currency and money are not synonymous. I don't know how many times I have to tell you that, but they aren't. Money is a
thing independent of the currencies made available by various administrative entities. So, if you want your statement to be true, you have to concede that the Wester Empire enslaves it populations in the most insidious manner possible.
Xequecal wrote:
You want to create jobs? Tell the big companies that if they don't hire X people annually based on their size they eat a massive tax penalty. They don't like it and want to move out of the country? Fine. You get a huge duty if you want to sell back into the US. Would this have negative effects on the health of these companies? Sure, it would, but no worse than the massive inflation caused by the government printing trillions of dollars.
This wouldn't create jobs at all. In fact, every time this has been tried, it's proven to decrease jobs, drive up the cost of goods, and marginalize the economic force actual people can exert in the world. More to the point, if it were true, we'd actually be far along on the way to a sound economy. Importing goods should be more expensive in every respect when compared to producing goods domestically. There's nothing man-made on this planet the U.S. cannot produce faster, better and more efficiently than every other country on the planet.
Xequecal wrote:
This is what China does, and it works great for them. There are massive duties on goods sold in China by foreign corporations, that's if they let you sell at all. If you want to sell anything there, you need to combine or ally with a Chinese corporation and give their government oversight of all your assets, so if you try to make a quick profit and run they can seize all your crap.
You mean China, which is experiencing real growth both financially and economically, using conservative economic policies works? There's all sorts of political problems with their system, but they have a freer economy than the United States, and that's rather ironic. Sure, there are all sorts of "western" human rights violations going on and rampant pollution, but that's because the "people" own the "means of production". Of course, if that's not sardonic enough for you, let me make it clear: the average Chinese citizen has more economic freedom than you do, Xeq.
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Corolinth wrote:
Facism is not a school of thought, it is a racial slur.