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United States News Title: Obamanomics “myths” and fairy tales Investors Business Daily hammers Barack Obamas budget approach in two articles today as based on myths and fairy tales. First, John Merline gets into the gritty details in rebutting Obamas notion that we can solve the monumental budgetary problems we face with slightly higher federal income tax rates on the rich. Merline offers a telling chart that shows the percentage of federal income tax revenue provided by the top 1%, and explains how little impact Obamas promise to roll back the Bush-era rates will have: But in making the case for tax hikes, Obama has made several claims that, while they may strike a chord with voters, perpetuate myths about taxes and the rich.
Obama would let the top two tax brackets go to where they were before those rates were set. Hed raise taxes for those making as little as $200,000, not just those worth at least a million dollars, and maintain the rates for everyone else. However, when it comes to affordability, lower rates for the rich were the smallest part of the Bush tax cut. Extending those rates would reduce revenues by about $700 billion (not the $1 trillion figure Obama has peddled) over 10 years, according to Treasury data. Letting these rates expire is assumed and thus not counted in Obamas 12-year plan. But keeping all the other Bush tax rates would cost about $3 trillion making them, by Obamas logic, four times as unaffordable as the cuts on the rich. Whatever issues we have at the moment with the federal tax system, the results show that the argument that its insufficiently progressive are simply false. Merlines chart shows that the top 1% of earners have paid an increasing share of overall federal income-tax revenues since 1980: The issue of revenues may well be due to the progressive nature of the tax system. Any system this dependent on the top 1% is vulnerable to sharp swings based on economic performance. On the federal level, this is somewhat tempered by having a lower rate on capital gains, but those still add significant revenue to the Treasury. California, for instance, has this same problem only to a greater degree, thanks to their very progressive income tax system, which relies more on capital-gains tax revenue. A flat tax would provide a much more stable basis on which to produce reliable revenue. Adding back the $700 billion over ten years hardly makes a dent in the projected $9-trillion plus deficits over the next ten years. The problem isnt that the wealthy arent paying their fair share, its that there isnt enough income on that level to tax to close the gap. In order to maintain current spending levels, we would need confiscatory rates of nearly 100% from not just the top 1%, but more likely closer to the top 10% or 15% of Americans. Those are, however, the people we most need as investors in the private sector to create jobs and maintain a healthy economy. We arent facing a revenue crisis; we are in the middle of a spending crisis. Michael Ramirez makes the point bluntly in his excellent editorial cartoon for IBD today: Its the same old populist fairy tale that got us into the spending crisis we have at the moment. Hopefully, Americans have grown up and stopped buying it. Also, be sure to check out Ramirez terrific collection of his works: Everyone Has the Right to My Opinion, which covers the entire breadth of Ramirez career, and it gives fascinating look at political history. Read my review here, and watch my interviews with Ramirez here and here. And dont forget to check out the entire Investors.com site, which has now incorporated all of the former IBD Editorials, while individual investors still exist.
Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 3.
#1. To: calcon (#0)
See, isn't it better to focus on things like this instead of the BC freakshow?
yep, i had to stop, i was laughing so hard I think I hurt myself.
I know, but the BC stuff, like the Great Yukon Conspiracy, is just too fun to miss.
#4. To: Skip Intro (#3)
oh yeah, total laugh a minute
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