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Tax Cuts are a Real Turkey for the Economy

By Liz Stanton, AlterNet. Posted November 24, 2005.


President Bush's beloved tax cuts have neither grown the economy nor created new jobs. So why should we extend them?

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On Thanksgiving Day, families across the country will sit down to turkey dinners and contemplate what they have to be thankful for. One blessing that everybody needs is a good job -- or jobs, in this day and age -- to put bread on the family table. President Bush agrees that creating good jobs is a priority. He has repeatedly promised that his large-scale tax cuts will grow the economy and create new jobs. So should families planning their Thanksgiving feasts be giving thanks to the tax cuts for having created a plethora of new jobs?

Resoundingly, no. The Bush tax cuts did not produce new jobs. In 2003, the President's Council on Economic Advisers promised 5.5 million new jobs by 2004, but only 2.6 million jobs were actually created. The jobs created failed to even match the 4.1 million new jobs expected in a normally functioning economy, let alone one supposedly supercharged by tax cuts. Yet that hasn't stopped conservative forecasters from chanting the "tax cuts create jobs" mantra in 2005.

The quality of jobs, measured by income, health insurance and retirement benefits, has also declined appreciably since the 2001 tax cuts. Between 2000 and 2004, inflation-adjusted family income declined, and the number of U.S. workers covered by employer-provided retirement benefits and health insurance contracted.

African-American and Latino families have seen their economic security deteriorate even faster than white families. Despite the president's statement that tax cuts would create jobs for all who want them, the racial economic divide has widened. African-American unemployment remains about twice as high as that of white workers. And the earnings gap between white workers and workers of color has grown even steeper since the 2001 tax cuts.

One of many reasons that tax cuts are a shaky formula for increasing jobs is that tax cuts mean less government revenue and therefore fewer public-sector jobs. Some tax revenues are spent hiring government workers -- direct job creation -- as well as purchasing goods and services from private businesses -- indirect job creation. Tax cuts may eventually stimulate investment that may generate some new jobs, but less government revenue will eliminate jobs at the same time, offsetting any positive job growth.

Tax cuts are an unsound prescription for job creation and economic good health, and more and more people recognize that relentless tax cutting, far from creating new jobs, has instead created a staggering deficit that threatens our children. Asked in an April 2004 CNN poll to choose between the 2003 tax cuts and a job creation program, 76 percent of respondents chose jobs; 50 percent chose deficit reduction over tax cuts; and 60 percent said they had not benefited from tax cuts.

The wisdom of the people's choice is reflected by the conservative chairman of the Federal Reserve, Alan Greenspan, who said: "We should not be cutting taxes by borrowing ... We do not have the capability of having both productive tax cuts and large expenditure increases, and presume (sic) that the deficit doesn't matter." (November 4, 2005). In contrast, the Chairman of the President's Advisory Panel on Federal Tax Reform, Connie Mack, had this to say in a recent interview in the New York Times Magazine:

Interviewer: Well, the U.S. government has to get money from somewhere. As a two-term former Republican senator from Florida, where do you suggest we get money from?
Mack: What money?
Interviewer: The money to run this country.
Mack: We'll borrow it.

What have tax cuts given us to be thankful for? Nothing. The 2001 and 2003 tax cuts were a feast for the rich taken directly from the tables of the poor, the working class, the middle class, people of color, children and the elderly. Tax cuts made in the name of jobs that have not and will not materialize reveal a government acting in service of the voracious appetite of the very richest people in the United States.

The Bush administration's promise that tax cuts for the rich would trickle down to workers has been broken. And when tax cuts and more tax cuts haven't succeeded in job creation or economic stimulus, how can we expect that still more tax cuts or permanent tax cuts somehow will? These tax cuts have been a real turkey for the economy.

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Liz Stanton is the Research Director for United for a Fair Economy, an independent, national non-profit that spotlights the growing economic divide in the U.S.

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Total failure
Posted by: Lincoln fan on Nov 24, 2005 5:36 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The economy is a mystery to me, but the tax cut scheme seems a total failure. Where has the money given to the rich gone? Rich people do not put their money under the mattress unless they are cheating on taxes. If they were investing in US corporations the stock market would have gone up; it didn't. If they increased spending on goods manufactured in the US jobs would have increased; they haven't. If they are investing in US government bonds that would lower the amount borrowed overseas. Has it? To the middle class it makes little difference, we will pay off the debt either to our own wealthy or to foreign investors. The wealthy should pay their share of the debt. The tax cuts should be rescinded.

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» the ECONOMY is no mystery Posted by: qrswave
Even more
Posted by: Lincoln fan on Nov 24, 2005 6:04 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Tax cuts made in the name of jobs that have not and will not materialize reveal a government acting in service of the voracious appetite of the very richest people in the United States.
This is not the only revelation. From cuts in student loans to the effort to kill Social Security the government has proven that it is no friend of the middle class, much less the poor. It is time for the people to take control of our government. This can be done by forcing both parties to campaign on issues important to us. Click on IT CAN BE DONE

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I'm no economist...
Posted by: deha on Nov 24, 2005 7:54 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
but even I know that spending more than you have coming in is a recipe for fiscal disaster. Those who benefit the most from our economic structures (i.e., the wealthy) should bear the largest burden of taxation. Instead we are raping the middle class and watching the distribution of wealth become even more inequitable. And that's not to mention what we're doing to the most vulnerable among us: the working poor and their children.

I remember seeing a Money magazine cover many years ago featuring a group of young up-and-coming business entrepreneurs (dating myself here, it was in the 80's when yuppiedom was all the rage). The premise of the article was basically, "These people all made over a million dollars last year and didn't pay a penny in income tax." This came out about the time I was trying to scratch up another thousand bucks to satisfy my own tax liability for that year after having already paid in nearly 25% of my income in federal withholding. And me a single parent with a deadbeat ex-spouse, barely getting by. WTF!

Will Rogers once said, "It's a great country, but you can't live in it for nothing." It seems, however, that Booshco's mission is to make sure their wealthy cronies can do just that. And at the expense of everyone who makes the wealth possible!

We are so easily hornswoggled by these evil bastards because we are ignorant as a people. The quality of public education in this country is poor in comparison to the rest of the developed world because that the powers that be, quite frankly, don't want children to learn how to be critical thinkers. If they did learn how, they might just rise up, get involved, and figure out how to make America work for all her citizens, not just the wealthiest 5%. So we pay lip service to prioritizing education, while making sure that the kids who are a product of our educational system are barely functional.

That's how you transform a country that was once a shining beacon of hope into a second or third rate power that can't (or more accurately, won't) take care of its own people. Dumb us down and tell us those crumbs falling from the tables of the wealthy are really a banquet. We'll buy it, just like we buy all the crap that's spewed at us. We don't know any better (and quite frankly, many of us don't care to, either).

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» RE: I'm no economist... Posted by: deha
» You are correct Posted by: popsicle67
» RE: You are correct Posted by: maxpayne
It's a Machiavellian Scheme
Posted by: vomitgalore on Nov 24, 2005 7:56 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Think of all our resources as water, dammed up in a reservior, and released slowly through the dam, into society. They keep the gates of the dam barely open, and allow only a trickle of water to flow, despite the fact that the reservior is full. Why not open the thing up and let the water flow freely? Because they need to create poverty. Poverty is a weapon they use to control. It makes people work in shit jobs for dog-food pay and be thankful. It creates the tension that fuels the fear and anger and desperation, that forces us to distrust our neighbors and fellow citizens. You must compete to eat, otherwise your a poor dog on the street. Who cares? Nobody. Welcome to the USA. Worst civilization in the history of mankind-hands down!!!

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» RE: It's a Machiavellian Scheme Posted by: liberalibrarian
» Vomitgalore: you are RIGHT; Posted by: qrswave
» My dear eocilian Posted by: qrswave
Yet you are not being executed for saying this...
Posted by: eocilian on Nov 24, 2005 10:24 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Who are "they"? If "they" are so powerful, why don't they drag you out in the middle of the night and kill you like they do in other countries where the government actually keeps people illiterate and in poverty etc, so their population can't read foreign newspapers and will work 12 hours a day, 7 days a week for just enough food to feed their family.

Seeing as this is a democracy and you will not be killed for saying whatever you want, why not gather up evidence and prosecute... them... as thousands of people risked their lives in order to allow you the right to? Assuming you actually have a case against whoever "they" are.

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» BINGO! vomitgalore Posted by: qrswave
» Ignorance is strength! Posted by: Philip Newton
Carlin on HBO
Posted by: jwg on Nov 24, 2005 11:50 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If you get a chance check out the latest George Carlin gig on HBO. He talks about the owners of this country. You know the ones who got the tax break. The owners know that a war is good for them, they make money. They send jobs overseas, they make money. The price of oil goes up, they make money. They lobby congress and pay for elections, they make money. They try to get SS money to invest in the stock market, so they can make more money. They use their investment in the white house to get no bid contracts, they make money. We have one of the greatest natural disasters on the Gulf Coast, they make money. They give the aged Medicare they can't understand, fix it so the drug companys prices can't be challenged, they make money. They buy the pols in both parties so they can continue to make money.

The trouble for them is our national economy is based upon a consuming middle class that has been created since WWII, you know the ones like liberalibrarian who posted above.

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» .. who are they? Posted by: eocilian
» HEY jwg... Posted by: qrswave
How's the kool-aid?
Posted by: yolocowboy on Nov 24, 2005 2:00 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I have officially found the fever swamp of the left. You guys crack me up.

While the author never mentions the fact that the previous administration left a small recession for the current President, she states that tax cuts mean lower revenue for the treasury.

That is just not so. While the 2001 tax cuts were small personal refunds created to get people spending, they were just enough to bring us out a recession, not grow the economy by a large factor. The 2003 tax cuts were aimed more toward business and the investment community. We are reaping the rewards for these tax cuts today.

Here are some facts that the left doesn't talk about.
Business investment has increased between 5 and 18 percent in each of the seven quarters following passage of the 2003 tax bill. That means jobs and R&D.

Since the 2003 tax cuts, 4 million new jobs have been created. Today’s 5-percent unemployment rate—the lowest since September 2001—means that many Americans left unemployed by the 2001 recession have now returned to work and become taxpayers.

And Finally, to bury the 'we can't afford tax cuts' line. Although tax revenues declined slightly between 2001 and 2003, they increased 5 percent in 2004, and are now on pace to gain 15 percent in 2005.

Tax cuts work, JFK knew it, you should too.

Happy Thankgiving.

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» RE: How's the kool-aid? Posted by: Lincoln fan
» RE: How's the kool-aid? Posted by: zooeyhall
» RE: How's the kool-aid? Posted by: billfaster
» You're no Kennedy, Mr President Posted by: Philip Newton
Well you know-
Posted by: popsicle67 on Nov 24, 2005 11:00 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It doesn't make any sense to raise taxes if prople are making less, does it? All of your doom and gloom goes to prove that the tax burden needs further relieving if anything. What I don't get is why you cannot see that,must be the crap you spew getting in your eyes.

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» RE: Well you know- Posted by: englehart
Progressives: This whole Tax issue is bogus and manipulative!
Posted by: wdzeller on Nov 25, 2005 10:52 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The fact is that the government need not collect one "penny" of "money" from the citizens to run the government.
(Please note that when I refer to the concept of money in my postings I always express such terms in quotes, as what we call "money" IS NOT real money)

How so, one may ask? "Money" is now nothing but an issue of Government Debt. Real Money and Debt are not the same thing, even though our beloved Government orders us to accept this as such. The Government can make "money" by two primary ways:
1) Sell Government Debt known as Bonds to the Federal Reserve Bank, who then exchanges printing press "money" know as Federal Reserve Notes. Yes, our cash "money" is equal to one unit of Federal Debt!
2) Exchange Government Bond debt to foreigners who trade their "money" electronically for "Dollars" They get to hold the bond while the Government credits computer memory "money" to their accounts. Yes, there is no exchange of real money (gold or silver) and there is not even a physical exchange of paper money of any sort.
(Right now the ratio of this electronic "money" to cash "money" is 600 to 1!)

Therefore this whole issue of tax "money" is a crock. All they have to do to access funding is to exchange bonds for fictious dollars whose right to hold has been traded for by various electronic schemes.

The only reason we have taxes is so that politicians can vie for votes by redistributing "money" they don't even need. They know this and that this is the key to the power they have over us. They know that if they charge the citizens taxes, then they can pit one group against another, and as long as we have all of this internal squabbling, they will continue to be free to line their pockets and the pockets of the bankers whose aid they have enlisted to pull of these various schemes. This has gone on for over 90 years now, and it is sad to realize that the American people do not figure these things out until events known as Deflationary Great Depressions sprout from the seeds sown by all of these various Governmental monetary inflations.

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Benchmark stock market...
Posted by: gmmonko on Nov 25, 2005 3:16 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
According to roaring stock market, everything is going well regarding the economy. The way American now defends itself from inflation doesn't create well payed jobs. Low import prices mean that more production jobs have to be moved abroad and the replacement of jobs by service industry just doesn't happen as predicted or wanted. GM and Ford will close more plants and reopen them in China. GE bought large industrial properties in Mexico.
The fact that a country can't rely on service industry only is beeing ignored.

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