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http://blogs.eagletribune.com/soapbox/2009/11/24/253/
1 week ago · 1 comment
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http://blogs.eagletribune.com/soapbox/2009/11/24/253/
Second, "stimulus" is a generous term. While the government can certainly influence the economy with tax and spending policies, our ability to control a 14 trillion dollar economy is illusory at best. Arguably, the best role for the government is to a. discourage “bad” practices while encouraging “good” behavior (a surtax on coal fired power plants vs. tax credits for wind or solar power for example) while correcting, to the extent possible, the inherent inequities in a market driven capitalist system.
The very notion that cutting taxes increases revenues is hotly contested by many economists. There's little evidence that the previous bush tax cuts had any long term impact. The notion that taxes should be cut for the wealthy (the top 2 or 3% of income earners) as an incentive for them to invest more of their money is similarly specious since the wealthy really have no place else to put their money. Bill gates isn’t going to hide a billion dollars under a mattress or put it in a savings account at your local bank, he is going to invest it, regardless of tax policy.
Consider that many upper income earners will simply save or invest any tax cut or rebate. Some will pay off credit card bills. Most middle and working class folks (that’s the majority of us) will likely spend most of any rebate just as the poor who receive food stamps, WIC or a tax refund under the Earned Income Credit will spend theirs. That’s money going directly back into the economy, most of it in the communities where people live and work. It seems that tax breaks, rebates and "subsidies" like the EIC, food stamps, farmers' market coupons, WIC and welfare have greater and more direct benefit to our economy than tax breaks and subsidies for the wealthy and profitable corporations. We should stop worrying about the wealthy, they'll be fine.