Showing posts with label trickle down economics doesn't work. Show all posts
Showing posts with label trickle down economics doesn't work. Show all posts

Thursday, April 14, 2011

TAX CUTS FOR THE RICH AND THE CORPORATIONS DON’T BRING PROSPERITY


It has been proven time and time again that TRICKLE DOWN ECONOMICS doesn’t work, never will

If the Republican-Teahadists try to sell you a bill of goods once more; all you have to do is mention this article that appeared in DailyKos. If there was ever any doubt that the economy was humming and surplus instead of deficits happening it was during the Clinton years when we had a surplus for three years in a row…something unheard of in recent history.

But to hear Republican-Teahadist talk you would think that giving more money to the rich, tax breaks, subsidies to corporations and encourage them to send jobs abroad will automatically and magically bring us out of the economic morass they left as a result of Bush’s tax cuts and his incompetence. We can’t let them forget that this gargantuan mess we were in was of their own doing and President Obama has done his best to avert a bigger crisis regardless of all the obstruction and sabotage the Republicans have been conducting.

Once more the Republican-Teahadists want to give more tax cuts to the very wealthy at the expense of those who can least afford to give. They have nothing else to give; you can’t take away the beans from their dining table because that is all they have left. You can’t take away medical assistance because without it they will surely die (Republican-Teahadists real DEATH PANELS) And most of all, you can’t take away SOCIAL SECURITY from seniors because what they get is way below poverty levels and hardly enough to feed sparrows.


President Bush told the economists to put a lid on it and gave the American people the birdie.






Let’s see what Mark Sumner says in this article that appeared in Daily Koss on Sun Apr 10, 2011:


Between bargaining and surrender

In October of 1998, less than a week after he had become the subject of an impeachment hearing, President Clinton sat down to negotiate the 1999 budget with Republican leaders. Clinton was dealing with not just a Republican majority in the House under Newt Gingrich, but a Republican-controlled Senate guided by Trent Lott. Considering the battering his personal reputation had already taken, the specter of the upcoming circus in the House, the excitement among the Republican base, and the strong position of the Republican legislators, it might have been expected that Clinton would emerge from this encounter battered and scoring few, if any, victories. But in the end, Clinton came out of the negotiations holding a deal that left Democrats excited and Republicans pouting. Not only did the budget deal expand funds for education, it included new funds to fight global warming, expanded funding for the EPA to clean up polluted waterways, and a number of funding increases for other Democratic priorities. While Clinton wasn't able to convince the Republicans to go along with higher rates for oil companies seeking to drill on federal land, he traded standing pat on those rates for an agreement to limit road building in wilderness areas. Most of all, Clinton thwarted the biggest announced goal of the Republicans -- cutting into the growing surplus with a flurry of tax cuts. Just three weeks later, voters went to the polls and handed Republicans one of the worst losses for a party not occupying the White House.

The result was that 1999 brought a new record surplus, and in the fall of 1999, Clinton was ready to negotiate again. Though not with Newt Gingrich. Newster had failed to deliver at both the negotiating table and the voting booth, and his party was done with him by then. For the 2000 budget, Clinton again fended off attempts to drain the surplus through tax cuts. The result was the largest surplus in history, and the first time the federal government had posted three consecutive years of surplus since the 1940s.

What made these budget surpluses possible was not something that happened in 1998 or 1999, it was something that happened in Clinton's first year in office. In 1992, the last year before Clinton took office, the deficit grew significantly. In 1993, the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act took action against the deficit in a way that proved directly and immediately effective: it raised taxes, and it raised them most for the rich. Those earning around half a million a year saw their taxes jump from 29% to 36%. Those at the very top were hit with a surtax that set an effective tax rate of just under 40%. The bill also removed the cap on Medicare taxes. It set that much despised 35% corporate tax rate. It even included a 4 cent per gallon gas tax.

What was the economy crushing, job destroying effect of all this? Not only did the government immediately begin to pull in additional revenue and cut into the deficit, but the economy grew as well. In 1992, with taxes low, the US hit a 15 year high in unemployment at 7.6%. At the end of 1993, following the tax increases, unemployment had dropped by half a percent. It kept dropping. It was down again in 1995, and 1996, and 1997, and 1998. By 2000, the unemployment rate had settled around 4% for three solid years. A figure sometimes referred to as "full employment."

This long surge of growth, prosperity, and surplus would not end until George W. Bush became president and shepherded through the Economic Growth and Tax Relief Reconciliation Act of 2001. This act cut taxes, with by far the largest benefit going to those at the top. The highest bracket was reduced to 35%, capital gains taxes dropped to 8%, the size of untaxed estates was sharply increased. US industry responded almost immediately... by cutting jobs, moving more work overseas, and channeling more funds to those at the top. In the next four months, before the 9/11 attacks, unemployment spiked. At the same time, the budget surplus evaporated.

In just over one year, the Bush tax cuts converted the largest surplus ever into a growing deficit, and while deregulation of fiscal markets did help to create a revenue boost after 2004, that boost never brought the budget close to balance. Eventually any gains created were more than erased by the destabilization of the economy.

The result of the Bush years was that by 2008 the US was facing growing deficits at the same time there seemed little choice but to pony up trillions to save the financial institutions and try to keep what remained of the economy breathing. As a result, about a third of 2009 and 2010 budget deficits were directly due to efforts to salve the hideous results of deregulation and "creative" finance. But that's no longer true. The amount of stimulus and bailout money going into the federal budget has dropped precipitously, and will keep dropping.

The difference between the surplus years of 1997-2000 and the current deficit comes down to three things: the soaring defense budget driven largely by the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, the growing giveaway to the rich written into the Bush tax cuts, and the decline in revenues directly related to the economic downturn. Which makes it more than a little incredible that the budget deal addressed none of those issues.

How can that be? To start with, Bush era tax cuts, the one part of this problem which is growing faster than any other, were taken off the table before the budget fight really began. Despite a lot of talk the contrary, it appears as if the Defense Department budget will not be reduced, and rather than putting any additional spending toward programs that might stimulate the economy, the budget will defund those programs more rapidly. Most of the budget fight was conducted over items that not only didn't grow in the last year, they didn't grow in the last decade, with the majority of programs designed to help the poor. The wealthy are being asked to kick in... well, all the details aren't clear yet, but it looks like the sacrifice at the top will be giving up a big fat zero.

President Clinton, in the midst of a tough fight for this own political life and facing Republican control of both legislative chambers, emerged from negotiations with a deal that protected the budget while forwarding Democratic interests. Clinton was, and is, an acknowledged centerist, but he carved out a deal that protected the poor even as he was agreeing to give the Republicans some of what they wanted on the business side. He managed this by not only making his case behind closed doors, but in public. He did it by staking out a negotiating position and sticking with it. He did it by playing chicken with the Republicans in the budget showdown of 1995 and not blinking. When the GOP sat down with Clinton for those negotiations, they did it knowing they were dealing with someone who would take it to the wall and beyond.

Mostly Clinton won at the negotiating table by being willing to lose. By being willing to take a blow. By being willing to be disliked. By being ready to sit there as long as it took to strike a reasonable deal. He won by not surrendering.

That's a tactic that someone at the current White House just might want to research. Maybe it's time that President Obama set down his Reagan hagiography and start carrying a copy of Clinton's memoirs.”

Sources
Critics still wrong on what's driving deficit in coming years, Center on Budget and Policy Priorities

Clinton's Economic Plan: Impact on individuals New York Times, 18 Feb 1993

Omnibus Budget Reconcillation Act of 1993, Wikipedia

http://www.dailykos.com/

http://www.google.com/imgres?imgurl=http://schema-root.org/region/americas/north_america/usa/government/politicians/presidents/bill_clinton/bill_clinton.jpg&imgrefurl=http://schema-root.org/region/americas/north_america/usa/government/politicians/presidents/bill_clinton/&usg=__

Thursday, March 3, 2011

ECONOMICS 101 WAS NOT A COURSE REPUBLICANS WHO WENT TO COLLEGE ACTUALLY TOOK.

Judging by their askew view on how economics works and the effects it has on our country, its welfare and its people…Republicans are out of it.

Recently more than 300 Economists Repudiate Right-Wing "So Be It" Economics The stream of economic experts who are denouncing the budget slashing that the House of Representatives did last month has just turned into a flood.

Today the Economic Policy Institute and the Center for American Progress jointly released a statement signed by nearly 320 economists from around the country, including Nobel Prize winners Kenneth Arrow and Eric Maskin, former Vice Chairman of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System Alan Blinder, and former Chair of the President's Council of Economic Advisers and Director of the National Economic Council Laura Tyson.

That comes a day after Mark Zandi of Moody's Analytics released a report that estimated the House budget cuts would result in a loss of 700,000 jobs by 2012. That finding evoked a "so what?" from House Majority Leader Eric Cantor that was remarkably in line with the dismissive "so be it" comment that House Speaker John Boehner made earlier in February in response to concerns that budget cuts would result in job losses.

Folks, these are respected, luminaries in the field of Economics and they are all reaching a very concise and accurate assessment of what is happening. If you know only the rudimentary about how economics works you know that the Republican agenda just doesn’t work. Then we must come to the conclusion that they do know it doesn’t work and they are doing it to sabotage the Obama Presidency. I tend to think this is the case. We have to only look at the first two years of behavior of Republican lawmakers and all you see is NO, NO, NO…delay tactics and disingenuous talks and meetings where they want to appear that they are actually attempting to be bipartisan but they are in reality using this as just another delay tactic.

The Republican-Teahadists have come out and said it: “Obama will be a one term President” and they are doing everything, legal, illegal, ethical and unethical to make sure that will happen. They are economic terrorists who are hell-bent on killing jobs and destroying the economy so they can make the President and the Democrats look bad and win the reins of power in 2012. Hopefully, and I think there is room for optimism here; the American people are realizing this more and more.

The Republican plan is complex and evil; it is sick and so injurious to Americans and hurtful to our country. The Tehadist-Republicans are attacking from every possible angle: from the Republican Governors to neutralize and destroy LABOR UNIONS, from the Congress by re-introducing CULTURE WAR issues that we had long ago put to sleep. Through their surrogate news channel they are continuing to spread misinformation and lies and from the secretive, conspiratorial think tanks they are providing the ideas and suggesting methods to go out there and put the Democrats in the defense and pin the American people against each other...the old concept of divide and conquer comes into light here.


We have to be clear about this: while we are either fighting each other over Culture War issues; while people are worried sick about the survival of SOCIAL SECURITY, when Labor Unions come under attack and are fighting for their very survival; then it is very convenient that the narrative is not going to include the mess they made during the Bush years nor does it focus public opinion against the TAX CUT EXTENSIONS for the very rich.

Sunday, February 27, 2011

CUTTING TAXES ON THE RICH…THE UNDESIRED RESULTS


Republicans talk about deficit reduction, smaller government, fiscal responsibility…they are hypocrites.

America has accumulated an alarming debt because the Republicans insisted on cutting taxes for the very rich and then borrow money to compensate for that revenue that is not coming in. Their tired rants about how it is not possible to fix the economic mess they left behind by raising taxes on the rich when the country is still in a recession because taxes actually deprive the economy of money. Again, that tired old Reagan asinine axiom “TRICKLE DOWN ECONOMICS” at work. The Republican-Teahadists live by it and are not even recognizing that there is no factual basis for this crazy idea which papa Bush called “VODOO ECONOMICS”

If that premise was to be taken as factual and the truth, then how come we have had this damaging economic crisis? The very rich and the corporations had their tax breaks and that money didn’t go into circulation nor did it prevent the economic meltdown.

All we have to do is look at the historical data of taxes and revenues. When we cut taxes and increase military spending, then cut spending on our infrastructure the results are the budget deficits and a significant slowdown of the economic growth. Yet during the Clinton years when taxes on the rich were raised and there were increased investments in infrastructure the government actually had budget SURPLUSES and the economy was growing at a very robust rate.

Enter boy George Bush and in the early part of his first term he lowered taxes because he thought that there were surpluses and could stimulate the economy by giving the rich and the corporations a break. Nothing could be more wrong than what he did and we were able to ascertain how horrific his actions on this area were…just like most of the things he did during the eight long years he was in office. The damage President Bush and his cronies did to our country is difficult to fathom and it will be many decades before we are able to reach a full recovery and understand fully the implications of such incompetence.

But it is there for everyone to see: It was a meek growth in the economy, eight million jobs lost, billions upon billions of dollars piled on to the debt and it all came to a climax with a final crash of banks and the stock market.

The nerve of these Republicans to suggest that we can cut on safety net programs like SOCIAL SECURITY and Education and to attack labor unions as they have decimated the middle class has and it is a shame because the middle class is the backbone of our society…you destroy it and you destroy the country.

But let us not be so harsh; let us really think about the Republican perspective and their agenda: It is simply to make things as miserable for the American people so that they will blame President Obama for all their ills…vicissitudes that were created by them and not by Obama. They are so heartless and wicked that they rather see misery and poverty descend upon America than to forfeit the regaining of power. That is all there is to it…they are the puppets of the rich and the corporations and it does not suit them well to have the general population share the riches and their rightful place in society.

So now, to address the Reagan/Bush deficits the DC elites continue to insist in extending the tax cuts for the rich and giving away subsidies to corporations that don’t even have their headquarters in America. How do they propose to balance the budget? In their simplistic askew ideology it is simple: break the back of the unions, eliminate public education and do away with SOCIAL SECURITY. It is perverted and immoral.