SimpleDon
Veteran Member
Wonkblog in the Washington Post is climbing the list of must reads for me.
They have published an analysis of the various Republican tax plans.
The new Republican tax plan is just the Bush tax cuts on steroids
What happens is the same that happened with the Bush tax cuts. A tax cut by lowering the top tax rate while heavily weighted to benefit the 1% isn't enough for the investor class, they want more. Instead of just lowering the top income tax rates they then lower the taxes that virtually only the top 0.1% pay, capital gains, on stock dividends and the inheritance tax, leaving nothing for the middle class. This is problem that the Republicans now face and it is the same problem that George W. Bush faced in 2000. History repeats itself. Here is what George W. Bush did.
It is hard to imagine that this would do anything but make our historically absolute worst income inequality much worse. Without increasing real business investment any, while building ever larger asset bubbles resulting in more meltdowns.
This is our modern Republican party. Champions of the big guy.
(Sorry to interrupt your Iran letter and Hillary email discussions with this real economic policy thread. You can now go back to your favorite diversions, secure in the knowledge that conservative governance is hard at work, behind the scenes.)
They have published an analysis of the various Republican tax plans.
The new Republican tax plan is just the Bush tax cuts on steroids
(Since Reagan) conservatives have treated it as received wisdom that cutting taxes as much as possible is the onefold path to economic and political nirvana. Well, make that cutting the top tax rate as much as possible. The idea, known as supply-side economics, is that the lower the top rate, the more top earners will work and invest, and the more growth there will be to—keep waiting for it—trickle down to everyone else. Never mind that this hasn't really worked in the past and couldn't even work in the present, at least not that much, now that the top rate is already pretty low. This is still an orthodoxy that Republicans are barely allowed to deviate from, and only then if they say three Hail Reagans as penance.
What happens is the same that happened with the Bush tax cuts. A tax cut by lowering the top tax rate while heavily weighted to benefit the 1% isn't enough for the investor class, they want more. Instead of just lowering the top income tax rates they then lower the taxes that virtually only the top 0.1% pay, capital gains, on stock dividends and the inheritance tax, leaving nothing for the middle class. This is problem that the Republicans now face and it is the same problem that George W. Bush faced in 2000. History repeats itself. Here is what George W. Bush did.
George W. Bush's big idea was that instead of trying to cut the top rate from 39.6 to, say, 28 percent, Republicans should settle for 35 percent. That way there'd be money left over—which is a bit of a misnomer since this was all deficit-financed anyway—for them to expand, among others, the Earned Income Tax Credit and the Child Tax Credit. That way there'd be something for the middle class. But did Bush get the high priests of the supply-side to agree to this? Well, by giving them the real goodies: a capital gains tax cut from 20 to 15 percent, a dividend tax cut from 39.6 to 15 percent, and an estate tax cut eventually all the way down to zero. That's why, even though this did boost middle-class after-tax incomes by 2.2 percent, it boosted the top 1 and 0.1 percent the most, up 5.6 and 6.9 percent, respectively. But that didn't stop the Bush administration from claiming that this was really about helping someone like a single waitress with two kids. Or stop the conservative Heritage Foundation from saying that, rather than being a fiscally irresponsible exercise in upward redistribution, the Bush tax cuts would actually pay off the national debt by increasing growth so much that revenue wouldn't fall that much. [This didn't happen by the way.]
That's the same big idea that Marco Rubio and Mike Lee have today. They also want to cut the top rate from 39.6 to "only" 35 percent, and use the money that could have gone into cutting it even further to expand the Child Tax Credit from $1,000 to $3,500 instead. Now that credit would only be refundable against payroll and income taxes—so if you didn't owe any, you wouldn't get any help—which is why most of its benefits would go to the middle and upper-middle classes. The nonpartisan Tax Policy Center estimates that, altogether, this plan would raise after-tax incomes 1 percent for the bottom 40 percent, around 2.4 percent for the next 50, 2.8 percent for the top 1, and 3.8 percent for the top 0.1. That adds up to a lot of red ink, though: $2.4 trillion more in deficits over the next decade, to be exact.
So they went back to the drawing board, and sketched something that would blow up the budget even more. Why? Well, the supply-siders decided that this plan wasn't conservative enough, if not an outright "triumph of liberalism." And it was going a lot more than cutting investment taxes to 15 percent for them to change their minds. That's why the new Rubio-Lee plan would cut capital gains taxes from 23.8 percent to zero, dividend taxes from 23.8 percent to zero, and the estate tax from 40 percent to zero. That's a lot of zeroes. Not only that, but it would also cut the corporate tax rate from 35 to 25 percent, stop taxing overseas earnings, and allow businesses to deduct all their expenses at once. Nobody's run the numbers yet, but it's more than safe to say that most of these new tax cuts would go to the top 1 percent. Just think about this. The Tax Policy Center says that getting rid of all investment taxes would, on average, give someone in the middle 40 to 60 percent a $66 tax cut—don't spend it all in one place!—while the top 1 percent would get $61,891 and the top 0.1 percent would get $401,554.
It is hard to imagine that this would do anything but make our historically absolute worst income inequality much worse. Without increasing real business investment any, while building ever larger asset bubbles resulting in more meltdowns.
This is our modern Republican party. Champions of the big guy.
(Sorry to interrupt your Iran letter and Hillary email discussions with this real economic policy thread. You can now go back to your favorite diversions, secure in the knowledge that conservative governance is hard at work, behind the scenes.)