Born Again Deficit Virgins
By Jon Perr Monday Nov 16, 2009 11:00am
Everything you need to know about the descent of the conservative movement into a hypocritical caricature is illustrated by two of its proudest constituencies: Republican deficit hawks and so-called "born again virgins." Having already violated the moral strictures they claim to hold dearest, each now asks the American people to join them in pretending their sin never happened. But unlike a generation of Republican leaders who built a mountain of national debt for the United States, the secondary virgins only screwed themselves.
The Republicans' shameless cynicism was perfectly captured by Vice President Dick Cheney, who in 2002 proclaimed, "Reagan proved deficits don't matter."
Not, that is, if a Republican is in the White House. But when Barack Obama stepped into the Oval Office and the $1.2 trillion deficit George W. Bush left for him there, the GOP quickly changed its tune. While the national debt tripled under Ronald Reagan and doubled again under President Bush, House Minority Leader John Boehner in February decried the $787 billion emergency economic recovery spending as "one big down payment on a new American socialist experiment." By June, Boehner warned of the "crushing debt Washington Democrats are running up." And Senator Judd Gregg (R-NH), Obama's aborted choice for Commerce Secretary, slapped the President last month, "we're basically on the path to a banana-republic-type of financial situation in this country." And, Gregg added:
"You can't keep throwing debt on top of debt."
Of course, throwing debt on top of debt is precisely what Gregg and his GOP allies have done for over a generation.
The Republicans' fiscal rot didn't begin with George W. Bush, but with Ronald Reagan. It was the legendary Gipper whose financial recklessness and tax-cutting fetish came to define the modern GOP.
The numbers tell the story. As predicted, Reagan's massive $749 billion supply-side tax cuts in 1981 quickly produced even more massive annual budget deficits. Combined with his rapid increase in defense spending, Reagan delivered not the balanced budgets he promised, but record-settings deficits. Even his OMB alchemist David Stockman could not obscure the disaster with his famous "rosy scenarios."
Forced to raise taxes twice to avert financial catastrophe (a fact conveniently forgotten in the conservative hagiography of Reagan), the Gipper nonetheless presided over a tripling of the American national debt. The $998 billion debt he inherited in 1981 exploded to $2.9 trillion by the end of his second term. By the time he left office in 1989, Ronald Reagan equaled the entire debt burden produced by the previous 200 years of American history.
For his part, George H.W. Bush hardly stemmed the flow of red ink. And when Bush the Elder broke his "read my lips, no new taxes" pledge to address the cascading budget shortfalls, his own Republican Party turned on him. While Bush's apostasy helped ensure his defeat by Bill Clinton, it was Clinton's 1993 deficit-cutting package (passed without a single GOP vote in either house of Congress) which helped usher in the surpluses of the late 1990's.
Alas, they were to be short-lived. Inheriting a federal budget in the black and CBO forecast for a $5.6 trillion surplus over 10 years, President George W. Bush quickly set about dismantling the progress made under Clinton. Bush's $1.4 trillion tax cut in 2001, followed by a second round in 2003, accounted for the bulk of the yawning budget deficits he produced.
Like Reagan and Stockman before him, Bush resorted to the rosy scenario to claim he would halve the budget deficit by 2009. Before the financial system meltdown last fall, Bush's deficit already reached $490 billion. (And even before the passage of the Wall Street bailout, Bush had presided over a $4 trillion increase in the national debt, a staggering 71% jump.) By this January, the mind-numbing deficit figure reached $1.2 trillion, forcing President Bush to raise the debt ceiling to $11.3 trillion.
But despite studies showing that the payday for the richest Americans accounted for half of the mushrooming budget deficits of the Bush years, Judd Gregg in an interview with Forrest Sawyer on PBS Frontline tried to maintain the tried and untrue GOP talking point that tax cuts produce revenue gains for the Treasury:
SAWYER: Way back in 2000, there were surpluses projected, and that had come after some good luck with the economy and some hard work. And then came along this massive tax cut. Was that in retrospect a mistake?
GREGG: No, absolutely not. The surpluses that were projected weren't lost because of the tax cut. They were lost because of...the fact that we went into a recession as a result of 9/11 and the Internet bubble bursting...much like the real estate bubble we are going through today...The surpluses which we were running, which we thought we were going to run for a long time, simply weren't realized as a result of those two events.
Sadly for Gregg, his revisionist history is both transparent and wrong.
As David Leonhardt documented in the New York Times in June, "President Obama's agenda, ambitious as it may be, is responsible for only a sliver of the deficits, despite what many of his Republican critics are saying."

(Click here to see the full image.)
In that jaw-dropping chart illustrating how today's trillion-dollar deficits were created, the Times concluded that even before the Bush recession commenced in December 2007, Dubya's dangerously irresponsible tax cuts and unfunded spending produced an ocean of red ink that dwarfed the impact of President Obama's stimulus and other spending programs:
"The economic growth under George W. Bush did not generate nearly enough tax revenue to pay for his agenda, which included tax cuts, the Iraq war, and Medicare prescription drug coverage."
Looking at the fiscal year 2009 data, former Reagan Treasury official Bruce Bartlett three weeks ago destroyed the mythology of the born again Republican deficit hawks:
Now let's fast forward to the end of fiscal year 2009, which ended on September 30. According to CBO, it ended with spending at $3,515 billion and revenues of $2,106 billion for a deficit of $1,409 billion.
To recap, the deficit came in $223 billion higher than projected [in January], but spending was $28 billion and revenues were $251 billion less than expected. Thus we can conclude that more than 100 percent of the increase in the deficit since January is accounted for by lower revenues. Not one penny is due to higher spending.
It should be further noted that revenues are lower to a large extent because of tax cuts included in the February stimulus. According to the Joint Committee on Taxation, these tax cuts reduced revenues in FY2009 by $98 billion over what would otherwise have been the case. This is important because the Republican position has consistently been that tax cuts and only tax cuts are an appropriate response to the economic crisis...
I think there are grounds on which to criticize the Obama administration's anti-recession actions. But spending too much is not one of them. Indeed, based on this analysis, it is pretty obvious that spending - real spending on things like public works - has been grossly inadequate. The idea that Reagan-style tax cuts would have done anything is just nuts.
And to be sure, making the Bush tax cuts permanent would make the federal government's fiscal picture worse - much worse. As the AP detailed in October (see chart at the top of the page), continuing President Bush's massive tax windfall for the wealthiest Americans who need it least constitutes a grave threat to the nation's fiscal stability.
No doubt, the announcement this week that the monthly deficit for October reached a record $176 billion is a stark reminder of the dark clouds hanging over the U.S. budget. But given the magnitude of the economic downturn gripping the United States, deficit cutting will have to wait.
As for what shape that will take, the early signs are not promising. President Obama is said to be investigating a freeze of domestic spending in next year's budget, and may even advocate a 5% cut. But if that sounds like a warmed over version of Congress' Gramm-Rudman monstrosity of the Reagan years, the calls from some moderate Senate Democrats like Evan Bayh (D-IN) to outsource responsibility by creating a "deficit commission" is even worse. As the New York Times groused in March 1989, President George H.W. Bush tried that something like that, too:
The National Economic Commission's majority report on balancing the budget is a shamelessly superficial summary of President Bush's proposals. It endorses them all and rejects higher taxes. A minority report by six Democrats is more analytical and more critical of Mr. Bush. But it ducks the tax question, too. The enterprise thus ends, just as Mr. Bush had hoped, as a bipartisan flop.
Of course, President Obama is unlikely to follow in Bush 41's footsteps, who "scorned the commission publicly." In addition to pushing for the savings contained in the health care reforms now before Congress, Obama is more likely to back a package of entitlement reforms, spending cuts and tax increases. (Whether the President ultimately reverses course on his campaign promise not to raise taxes on those households earning less $250,000 a year, post-recession budgetary realities may off him no alternative.)
As for the Republicans, their formula is more of the same dogma that produced the deficit catastrophe in the first place. Butchering history and the truth, Sarah Palin regurgitated the Republican recipe in Hong Kong and (in almost identical language) in her book:
Ronald Reagan, he was faced with an even worse recession, and he showed us how to get out of here.
If you want real job growth, you cut taxes! And you reduce marginal tax rates on all Americans. Cut payroll taxes, eliminate capital gain taxes and slay the death tax, once and for all. Get federal spending under control, and then you step back and you watch the U.S. economy roar back to life. But it takes more courage for a politician to step back and let the free market correct itself than it does to push through panicky solutions or quick fixes.
Then again, Sarah Palin is also among the ranks of Republican crusaders for abstinence-only education. Her daughter, a poster child for its failure, has emerged an ambassador of sorts for teen abstinence despite her belief that "it's not realistic at all."
Neither is believing born again Republican deficit hawks.
(This piece also appears at Perrspectives.)
UPDATE: Almost on cue, Minority Leader John Boehner (R-OH) this week offered a comical response to President Obama's plans for post-recession deficit cutting. Boehner, who voted for the Bush tax cuts and the unfunded Medicare prescription drug program in 2003, claimed, "Washington Democrats’ so-called 'war on deficits' is about a year late and more than a trillion dollars short."









Login or Register to post comments.
..republican't!
Here's how the Repukes explain away all of the losses, overspending, theft and outright fraud they've perpetrated in recent years:
"9/11. 9/11. 9/11. 9/11. 9/11. 9/11. 9/11. 9/11. .........."
That's how you know it's all a sham.
I respect the hard work.
But most of this is old news.
..on every media outlet everywhere. Don't expect we'll see it on faux but seeing this TRUTH out there for the masses of the uninformed would be a beautiful thing.
If a guy shows up at a fight with a knife, you bring a gun..if a republican't shows up to a debate with a talking point, you bring the truth!
Repubs plow the defiicit/debt upwards and Grover Norquist and his anti-government pals applaud. Knowing that the next step will be to cut domestic programs.
But I think we all should memorize where the deficit was as percentage of GDP when Carter left office, when Reagan/Bush I left office, when Clinton left office and when Bush II left office. And ask tea baggers what they think.
On a related topic, Health Care, how can you expect the American public to be consistent on anything.
For example, from a poll today, comes this amazing inconsistency (and it's not the only one):
For example, asked if everyone should be required to have at least some health insurance, 67 percent agreed and 27 percent said no.
The responses flipped when people were asked about requiring everybody to carry insurance or face a federal penalty: 64 percent said they would be opposed, while 28 percent favored that.
... but the day I read about Grover Norquist passing away in a freak accident involving a bathtub, it will be the day I start to reconsider my athesim and my stance on karma.
voodoo?
... trust me, we tried or maybe I got gipped by the Santeria store in New Orleans.
and sleep on the mall until congress takes action! http://twitter.com/#search?q=%23UnemployedMarchOnWashington
YES! And be joined by their GOP representatives...you know...the ones that delayed the extension on unemployment insurance.
I do not believe for one second all these "concerned" republicans are one bit concerned. This is just one of the biggest targets for their pissing match. The deficit has been growing since bush walked into the oval office and at that time the republicans embraced it while now they bemoan it. It's all bullshit coming from elephants.
Obama is one bit concerned either!
Obama has have doled out more to banks than Bush did!
http://blog.heritage.org/2009/03/24/bush-defi...
when Gregg said, "You can't keep throwing debt on top of debt", he didn't mean it as in, "one can't keep throwing debt on top of debt" - in a general or rhetorical way. He meant it literally, as in "you can't keep throwing debt on top of debt". Which, by deduction then means, "we can keep throwing debt on top of debt."
We can - cause when we do it, it benefits us, so it's ok.
You can't - cause that might benefit the country instead of just us, and that's not ok.
See?
It's actually easy to figure out, you just have to remember how completely devoid of integrity, ethics, and honesty Republicans are. They don't give a shit about anything but themselves - everything else, including death and war, is all a means to an end to them.
This is receipts from OMB:
Starting series: Total Receipts (in billions)
1992 1,091.3
1993 1,154.5
1994 1,258.7
1995 1,351.9
1996 1,453.2
1997 1,579.4
1998 1,722.0
1999 1,827.6
2000 2,025.5
2001 1,991.4
2002 1,853.4
2003 1,782.5
2004 1,880.3
2005 2,153.9
2006 2,407.3
2007 2,568.2
2008 2,524.3
2009 (estimates) r 2,073.7
2010 (estimates) r 2,264.4
Maybe it's not an income problem, but a spending problem. Too much was spent during the Bush administration, but how do we spend our way out of deficits?
.
...capitalist.
...unless you are talking about gov't jobs...
keynesianism 101
move people from receiving unemployment to having their own money to pay bills. in times of econ contraction, when consumers are deleveraging, when industry is cutting back on spending, it is up to the govt to pick up the slack, or flirt with a real depression. and, instead of gifting trillions to the financial sector (with nary a string attached or bringing back crucial regulation), govt stimulus should be aimed at helping consumers and job creation.
i support a mixed economy.
Growth... It is part of the National Income (or equivalently GDP).
BTW - my thesis is that if a government is running a DEFICIT, then to improve the economic growth of a nation, the govt should RAISE taxes. The converse is also true - surplus = tax cut.
Try convincing the every man that!
While I'll admit upfront that I in no way have all the information to make a nuts-and-bolts assessment, I'd offer a few suggestions to turn the money that we spend now into a smarter national investment. 1) Stop subsidizing corn altogether. We have enough cheap corn to go around, as any visit to a McDonald's, Burger King, et al would prove. 2) Stop giving money to murderers. The money that Xi(formerly Blackwater) receives from our government could just as easily go into more properly equipping our overseas GIs, providing the only surge the US armed forces have truly needed. The same goes for paying companies to murder our own troops(KBR). 3) Substantial investment in alternative energies. Hopefully, the status quo has not fully adopted a "oil companies' unfair price hikes are SO 2006" mindset already.
The Republicans.
Really .. who WOULDN'T agree with a false mantra of "cut taxes, shrink government..."?
It just isn't the truth!
glad we all got that strait!
...now what?
there's Master Card
They continue to act like incompetent fools.
I don't know...
I hate the Republicans because they are ideologically bankrupt, stuck on 1978 memes, demonstrably wrong on pretty much EVERY THING!, representative of the traits that are truly ugly (xenophobic, greedy, selfish, rapacious,etc) and ignorant about history and reality beyond believe... And on top of it, the most hypocritical batch of slime I have ever met!
Course, the Dems refuse to stand for anything, act like powerless pawns.... all defense and no offense. Claim to be for the common man, but will sell their souls to maintain a weak grip on power. They let the Republicans frame EVERY issue! They even let the Republicans decide what the Dems stand for and who they are!
I am not sure which is worse? At least with the Republicans I can 100% hate them...
Modern America ... tough decisions we have...
Why "hate"?
Isn't that a waste of energy?
Two questions: Why did we invade Iraq and how much has it cost us? The answer to the first question is still unclear depending on who you ask, the second, according to Nobel Prize-winning economist Joseph Stiglitz, it has cost the US economy over 3 trillion dollars.
Most of these newly found fiscally minded neocons ever answer the first question correctly. They him and hah regarding WMD's and information that was right but wrong, etc... but the only correct answer is because the Bush administration had a predisposition to invade. They filled their pockets with no-bod contract money and back door deals. Sadaam, who we once regarded as an ally, was an evil bastard but he was no more a threat than any other douche that currently runs a dictatorship.
We shouldn't concentrate on the past but we should realize that neocons are clearly representing lobbyists who's special interest groups rely on the system they've purchased over the last eight years.
These guys are as genuine as a three dollar bill when it comes to fiscal responsibility.
With the Flip Flop ads ..?
"First he was for deficits.. then he wasn't"
"First he was for family values... then he had illegal sex with a hooker."
"First he was for ... then he wasn't"
[I would say "She" but there really are no women in the GOP tent. Palin doesn't count. I mean intellectually capable .. you know - a lawyer, a professional, someone who can talk about all the schools they attended because they have advanced degrees ... not because they struggled to get a Communications BA)... just sayin']
God! I do think I hate the Dems more ...
[I am in a bad mood today!]
your donation to help run these ads.
...that would be the pot teakettle thing! (tabboo)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NPMIhRCt0x8
There are some things in this report that are erroneous, and some things that are omitted.
Bush's tax cuts and his unfunded wars ARE the great contributors to our current debt, which doubled under his regime.
However you omit the $700 Bankster bailout which was Bush, Obama and McCain sponsored.
There is HALF of the current deficit.
But that number itself is a fiction and dwarfed by the real number of $14 trillion, which has been committed to the Banksters.
The largest transfer of wealth in the history of the world. And it fixed nothing, they will be back for more.
Here is the way to find all of the HYPOCRITES in Congress:
CUT the TRILLION DOLLAR Defense budget by $900 billion, which would still leave us ahead of our nearest rival, get the money back from the Banksters, repeal the Bush tax cuts which Obama said he would do but didn't…
And then undertake a WPA 2.0, in earnest.
Then you will see the REPUBLICRATS in their full splendor.
In the corrupt duopoly, it does not matter which party is in power, because Washington DC is a city of BOUGHT MEN (and a few women).
Nomi Prins on the Banksters here
Yves Smith on TARP here
Colin Campbell, an expert in oil depletion, in an important letter to the Guardian UK here
We are subjected to this Conservative pig headed unreasoned determination to champion the so called "free market" even as we flounder in an ocean of debt accrued in an era of cynical greed driven policies.The whole system is teetering on the verge of total collapse yet they want more of the same.The lengths they are prepared to go to to preserve the status quo is what I find particularly unnerving.
http://www.flexpointford.com/#home
"The whole system is teetering on the verge of total collapse yet they want more of the same."
Obama and the demmy's are "more of the same"
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/...
indeed, they do.
they made billions of dollars from the way it was, of course they want it back. and neither decency, economic sanity, patriotism, nor democracy will slow them down in their drive to amass a mountain of cash.
Republicans and conservatives are happy with debts when the United States is paying for wars or for more military hardware/toys.
Job growth would occur fastest with a massive tax increase on the wealthy and investor class! In order to avoid paying 90% income tax, the wealthy would have to spread more of their earnings down through the actual business, by increasing both wages and hiring. Once they hit their ceiling, it should be a no brainer. The only types of jobs that are grown by tax cuts would be the odd "small-business" jobs, where, yes, a tax cut would spur growth. However, the republican tax cuts never hit the small business owners. The best they can hope for is a massively red-taped "tax credit". Like I've said before, a tax of 85-90% on any earnings, origin notwithstanding, over $3M would solve most of our economic problems.
With a massive tax increase, where would the jobs come from? At your arbitrary $3m ceiling, where would the incentive be to grow? At $3M, wouldn't there be layoffs so as not to exceed the ceiling?
did it put a ceiling on the massive american economic growth from the 1940s thru the 1970s when taxes on the highest income brackets were hovering btwn 70-90%?
no. it didn't. in fact, as has been demonstrated time and time and time again, the higher taxes on the wealthy has gone hand-in-hand with a strong and vibrant economy for the mass of americans, not just the top .01% that feeds off of our economic corpse.
No, because business would grow to meet demand, regardless of profit. The tax would apply to individuals, not the business as a whole. The only thing that would change is the percentage of income that could be kept as profit and divided out to investors and executives. And 3 Million is hardly arbitrary. It's slightly higher than the modern dollar value of the top tax brackets that worked fairly well up until the Reagan years. If you look at all of the major recessions we've ever had, they were all preceded (including the Great Depression) by a lowering of the effective top marginal tax rate. The incentive to grow the business would increase. The current system is what is responsible for the layoffs; attempting to maximize profits while minimizing expenditure. This would force re-investment into the company and employees, either in wages or benefits. If the production were lowered because of this, others would happily take up the slack in supply.
Besides, the Randian 'incentives' argument is crap; I find it hard to believe that the wealthy would rather make no money than up to $3M just out of principle.
For all the complaining about the deficit I suggest that people do some homework. The debt itself doubled under Bush from about $4 trillion to $8 trillion. Bush left Obama with a 2009 budget deficit of $1.2 trillion. The deficit that is expected over the next three years, primarily because of the Bush recession, can almost entirely be blamed on Bush, even if you factor in the stimulus bill and healthcare.
This very good article, mentioned in the above post says it all.
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/06/10/business/ec...
It is analysis of what the CBO has said on the debt issue and who is to blame. The debt and deficit were years in the making and hardly can be blamed on Obama.
You can almost entirely blame the deficit expected over the next three years on Bush. His deficit spending and the Bush recession are the biggest cause of the current expected deficits. Obama agenda is estimated to only responsible for 3% of the increase in the deficit over the next three years and the stimulus plan another 7%, which never would have had to be done without the Bush recession. So at max Obama may be able to held account for 10% of the deficit, which took many years to build. Here is my summary of how the deficit happened,as per the above post:
There was a $800 million surplus when Clinton left office. Through 2009 to 2012 the country is expected to run a $1.2 trillion deficit per year. Therefore there has been a $2 trillion swing in the deficit.
This is how the deficit happened.
37% of the $2 trillion swing in the deficit came from the recession. ie. reduced tax revenue
33% came from legislation signed by Bush, including tax cuts and prescription drug benefits that were not paid for
20% came from Obama extending the Bush policies like the wars and tax cuts; but also the TARP
7% came from the stimulus bill
3% comes from the Obama agenda on healthcare, education, energy and etc.
Net-net more than 90% of the deficit expected between 2009 and 2012 can be blamed either directly or indirectly on the Bush years. The Bush recession, the Bush wars, the Bush tax cuts, etc. In fact, you could argue that the 7% the stimulus bill will contribute is also Bush's fault because without the Bush recession there would be no need for the stimulus bill.
Has anyone in history been able to prevent/ avert a recession? Why are we not yet recovering?
We are recovering and officially out of a recession. The economy grew by 3.5% in the third quarter, the first time it has been positive since the recession started in 2007.
http://useconomy.about.com/b/2009/10/29/reces...
Jobs and unemployment are a lagging indicator, so it will take some time before they come back.
Yes, you can prevent a recession by not doing stupid things like not regulating financial risk and illogical mortgage programs, by doing crazy deficit spending and draining the resources of the country in two wars, by improving the competitive nature of the country by investing in education, technology, etc.
But doubling the deficit is ok if it doesn't go to the military? Deficit is deficit. You or I cant live forever on credit cards. At some point it has to be paid back.
How do you improve the "competitive nature" of the country? America develops much of the world's technology, but then is uncompetitive when it comes to implementation. Why have so many jobs gone offshore?
1 year from now, unemplyment will still be above 10%, and if you look at the estimated "growth" numbers of 3 1/2%you will find that most of it (1.66%) came from cash-for-clunkers. Plus, it will likely be revised downward to 2 1/2%. 4th quarter will be more like 1-1 1/2%. Japan is expected to grow 5% and china close to 9.
http://www.rttnews.com/Content/AllEconomicNew...
http://www.bea.gov/newsreleases/national/gdp/...
Roosevelt, Franklin D.
Oh, I forget. Conservatives believe he caused The Great Depression...
Nope, didn't cause it, but prolonged it.
http://www.usnews.com/articles/opinion/2008/1...
Entirely based on the false assumption that all economic growth occurs from the supply side down. Reagan sold it well, but the facts simply don't bear that out.
Aside from this, almost every peer review that I could find of Amity Shlaes' work regarded it as "revisionist", as she refused to include a massive amount of pertinent data (renewed spending as a result of, in the modern parlance, economic stimulus, greater levels of market stability, counting government and stimulus workers as unemployed...) when making her conclusions. Most economists and historians that I can find reference to seem to think that the recovery would have taken decades longer without intervention. She makes many claims about things that, even in theory, have been shunned by most of her peers. In a later article, she kind of disproves her own point by pointing out that federal spending slowed after 1936 when people started bitching about the deficit. Previously, she had blamed her own inflated unemployment numbers on the federal spending in the first place. Can't have it both ways.
You know folks, this really isn't that difficult of a problem.
TAX THE RICH!!!!
Take back the 2 trillion that Bush stole and gave to the trust funders for starters. Lookin' up already. Can you say "real stimulus package?"
Then bring back 95% marginal rates after the first 10 mill - with NO loopholes! You wouldn't need to worry about CEO compensation or regulation, because if they stole a billion, who cares, most of it would come right back into the people's hands.
Much better than the deal we have going now.
The rich are taxed. The top 10% of people pay 55% of the country's taxes.
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/29861648/
I'm talking about the top 1% who have more money than the bottom 95%.
Plus, how did the top 8% have 26% of all wealth transferred to them since 1980 if they are taxed enough?
You need to stop spewing rightwing bullshit talking points!
Furthermore, income taxes are NOT the same as payroll taxes - which is where the government gets far and away most of its revenues. The super rich trust funders don't pay payroll taxes.
Get a clue! The rich don't pay shit in taxes, and your a fool if you think they do!
This is from the Treasury site:
■In 2008 the federal government collected $2.5 trillion, an amount equal to 17.7 percent of GDP. Federal revenue has ranged from 14.4 to 20.9 percent of GDP over the past five decades, averaging 18.2 percent.
■The individual income tax has been the largest single source of federal revenue since 1950, averaging just over 8 percent of GDP.
■Payroll taxes swelled following the creation of Medicare in 1965. Taxes for Medicare, combined with periodic increases in Social Security taxes, caused payroll tax revenue to grow from 1.6 percent of GDP in 1950 to more than 6 percent since 1990. Payroll taxes also include railroad retirement, unemployment insurance, and federal workers’ pension contributions.
■Revenue from the corporate income tax fell from between 5 and 6 percent of GDP in the early 1950s to 2.1 percent of GDP in 2008.
Maybe the botom 95% need to be more innovative, work smarter or harder, to excel.
Your history is not quite accurate. The most severe recession we have endured since the 1930's was in the late 1970's, when marginal tax rates were at 70%. Reagan lowered them, and recovery began. During the depression, marginal rates were raised to 79%, the economy had stagnated for years, and WWII brought us out of that. The economy boomed during the 60's, because Kennedy lowered marginal tax rates to stimulate growth.
As far as incentive, what is ANYONE's incentive to produce? What would your incentive be if you knew someone, not doing your job, was going to take 90% of it?
Why don't you tell us about the magical "trickle down" fairy too? The one where if we give all the wealth to the oligarch's, they will treat us like family, and like everything will be so totally awesome.
History? Except being a pez dispenser for conservative stupidity, you don't have any idea what your talking about!
Both times we had republican free market is god bullshit, we ended up with GOP great depressions! Your going to have to do much better than this if you want to talk to the big kids who can smell bullshit a mile away!
OK, so outside of attacking me personally, where are your FACTS? Or does that just confuse your "argument"?
“Disillusioned” is the word that best describes how many Americans feel after eight years of George Bush and the election of Barack Obama a year ago. Republicans had a majority in congress and the presidency, yet achieved little for Middle America. They betrayed voters by inflating the deficit and growing government, sending men and women into nation-building wars whose purposes are still unknown, and created a culture of moral and ethical corruption in Washington D.C. It was under lax and pathetic regulatory oversight that a Republican president and Republican congress allowed corporations to betray shareholders with questionable and highly leveraged credit default swaps, only to be followed by a $700 billion taxpayer bailout created by the Bush administration—so much for limited government. Republicans are a party without a message and without a messenger.
Last week’s election results in Virginia and New Jersey, where Republican candidates for governor triumphed over their Democrat opponents, say more about the public’s rejection of Obama’s big government solutions and less about Republicans articulating a message to help Middle America. If Republicans think the public is embracing the party again, they are simply whistling past the graveyard, drunk on their own greed, and completely out of touch with the needs of Middle America.
Not that Democrats are offering any worthwhile solutions to address the most pressing needs of Middle America—job creation—but at least Democrats are intellectually honest about their desire for big government, universal healthcare, taxpayer-funded abortions, labor union power, and a litigious society for plaintiff lawyers to fleece the public. There is something, dare I say “refreshing and frank” about knowing where Democrats are on issues that impact Middle America, whereas Republicans pretend to be something they are not.
It is time for the Republican party to stop blindly whoring for the business community and begin addressing the issues that impact Middle America—job creation, affordable healthcare for all, and quality public education for our children. Republicans are a one-trick-pony, where “tax cuts” are their solution for all of Middle America’s problems. It’s because the party cannot articulate rational policy solutions to the real problems we face.
Take healthcare for instance; the Republican solution has been health savings accounts (HSAs). Are you kidding me? We can’t get people to save money in IRAs, never mind HSAs. That’s the best Republicans have got? Why don’t Republicans push to allow consumers to shop for healthcare across state lines, require everyone to have healthcare, and deny insurers from rejecting consumers with pre-existing conditions?
If Democrats have any hope of maintaining power, they too need to put viable solutions on the table for Middle America, where people care a hell of a lot more about jobs and the economy than government-run healthcare, union card check, the protection of gays from hate crimes, and cap and trade. Both parties have failed miserably to address the needs of Middle America, which I suppose is why I feel so disillusioned with both parties.
A. Muser
http://americanmuser.wordpress.com/
Muser, BRAVO!
I believe you are correct in that both parties have failed the American people. The quest isn't for GOOD government, but for power and making sure they are "safe" for the next election cycle. If you listen to the political talk shows, sometimes it's difficult to tell the difference between the Dems and Repubs.
So power doesn't become stale and entrenched, I would vote for anyone who proposed term limits of 2 for the Senate and 3 for the House so that the era of the professional politician would be over.
Login or Register to post comments.