ohsherrie wrote:The_Noble_Cause wrote:Gin and Tonic Sky wrote:Thats not true that there's no evidence. There are a couple of good examples out there:
You've changed the subject. None of these examples look at the effects of the 2000 Bush tax cuts - which is what the topic was, and NOT whether tax cuts can be stimulative in general. You are making the case for a policy that was already tried and failed.
http://www.1115.org/2010/07/14/delusion ... -tax-cuts/"
On July 31, 2008, the House Committee on the Budget reported (pdf):
To date, this Administration has created just 58,000 new jobs per month on average compared with 237,000 per month under President Clinton.
Man, those tax cuts really sent job creation through the roof, didn’t they? And it must be because of how the tax cuts paid for themselves (by creating that explosion of new jobs) that the national debt jumped by almost $5 trillion in the time of Bush."
To be fair, there were a lot less jobs that needed to be added. Remember, the Bush tax cuts were in response to the mini-recession happening at the end of the Clinton era and in 2005, small businesses paid far more taxes than during the Clinton era. I mean, if you want to go to a more-equal comparison, let's look at how many jobs were added and at what rate after the Reagan tax cuts.
I don't think any sane person can argue whether tax cuts or increases affect jobs and people's bottom line. Raise taxes, less money in your pocket and combined with a bad economy, less jobs. Lower taxes and there's more money in your pocket and combined with a decent economy, more jobs. I don't think anyone disputes that.
It seems to me the argument has to be framed as this: Can the economy sustain a tax increase in order to help pay for the expansion of government, the desired social programs, and the national debt. Is the economy strong enough to withstand small businesses and individuals, as well as large businesses and wealthy individuals, paying more of their earnings in taxes.
Fact: If the cuts expire across the board, I will have less money. Based on the the Bush tax cuts alone, it will suck but I can withstand it. Fact: There are a host of new taxes next year that will affect my income bracket and my current situation. Those two combined have created fear in me about my future. If I had one or two kids, maybe not so much. But I have six and I don't think I will be able to live in the same house and may lose my job. Those are just hard facts.
Fact, the national debt and the deficit are way too high and something MUST be done. My feeling is that the country, under the current economic climate, cannot sustain the level of spending that is happening and I swear to God no one can blame only Democrats or only Republicans. Our government has become so incredibly irresponsible that it makes me angry that I may have to move and may lose my job. From my point of view, both parties are the same. Dems obviously do spend more and want to tax more, but Republicans are right up there with them.
I am middle class and I will be hurt by the tax increases and the expiration of the tax cuts. No way around that argument.