Reagan also closed a lot of loopholes and tax payment is tax base * tax rate. The whole point of the laffer curve is that though the tax rate changes the tax base changes too. And at high rates it will because people will hide it, not earn it based on the high marginal rates. The change from 5% to 4% wouldn't change the tax base as much.
Why do you think that the laffer curve changes the tax base? If people want more money they have to work harder. If they turn down work because they have to pay more taxes for the money that they earn the work will still get done.
So it is a yes that you feel that we had many more deductions, that is loopholes, in the tax code in 1980 than we have now. Can you name the loopholes that Reagan closed that brought the tax rate cuts of about 71% minus 27%, the lowest marginal rate of the Reaganomics revolution, equals 44% reduction, down to the 4% that you claim? Did income tax loophole closing also compensate for the lost revenues from the inheritance and capital gains tax cuts too?
This line of reasoning maybe convincing to you, but I would want to see some data on it. And it seems unreasonable that they lower the marginal rates so much and then increased revenues back up again by so much. I remember reading that all of the tax loopholes together only account for about 90 billion dollars a year right now. And only about one quarter of them apply to individual taxes and that the majority of those are for charity donations and the home mortgage interest deduction. No one is going to propose eliminating those deductions.
What you are saying is that your brand of economics was sufficient in 1980 to determine that the economy was starved of investment and that the economy would benefit if we increased income inequality but it is not able to do the exact same thing today to explain why supply side economics failed to increase investment and growth. Because there are too many unknown and apparently unknowable factors and you are confused by all of them?
The issue is that the government will do a lot of policy changes that affect things.
Yes, and we know what they are a how much they affect the economy. And yet, you are reluctant to list those that you say were enacted to intentionally lower business investment and growth in the economy, what you are claiming was done.
A base tax cut is both supply and demand side policy though some tax changes are strictly one or the other.
And we know what they are and how they affect the economy. Tax cuts for the rich are supply side intended tax cuts that don't work either to boost business investment or growth in the economy. Tax cuts for the non-rich are demand side policies that do work.
This is because the modern economy is demand side driven, not supply side driven. The money that supply side economic policies redistributed from the non-rich to the rich had almost no impact on the economy of producing goods for consumption except for the fallout from asset bubbles popping. And these all hurt the economy.
But the government was veery much trying to steer a demand side recovery with the loose monetary policy. It's interesting, Reagan had a strong dollar policy. Reagan raised rates to slow down inflation while the opposite happened under Bush.
But the Fed did raise interest rates after the election of 2004. But it didn't stop the housing bubble, the worst the bubble building in the home mortgage market. Why? Because the bubble wasn't built with money created by a bank. It was fueled by a portion of the massive amount of money that was redistributed to the rich.
Raising the interest rates actually made the problem worse because it made the trances, the slices, of the mortgage backed securities and brought ever increasing amounts of money into the market for them.
No, you and dismal said that I had no understanding of basic, elemental economics that is taught in high school. I am simply presenting my understanding of the basic neoclassical economics. I am asking you to point out where I misunderstand neoclassical economics and the fundamentals of the free market.
The argument is that as price goes up, demand (whether use the word or use quantity bought at a price) goes down. So in the case of workers then as the cost of workers go up, then demand for workers goes down. The counter example is veblen goods.
I have explained this over and over. No economics or school of economics says that the demand for workers goes down if their wages go up so that they have to be laid off. Workers are hired to do work that needs to be done and that increases production. They aren't hired because they are cheaper today than yesterday.
Laying them off will decrease production. Laying them off will result in a larger loss for the employers than just paying the higher rate. The little saying that "the more a worker costs the fewer jobs that they will have," isn't based on supply and demand. It is based on the theory of marginal productivity. If this is your position then we have a whole new set of discussions to have.
I have made these points in every minimum wage thread that we have had without any of the opponents of an increase in the minimum wage addressing it.
I don't believe that you two understand neoclassical economics. Dismal's instance that the price determines both the supply and the demand, as an example. In fact, according to neoclassical economics supply and demand set the price and the price determines the quantity.
Partially yes when all factors are known, that a firm should price something where MR=MC.
MR=MC* is the theory of marginal productivity. If you are familiar with it and yet you are not using it to justify laying off productive profitable workers after a wage increase then you too must understand the weakness of the theory.
And of course, in the theory of marginal productivity the producer doesn't set the price to equal MC. It is set there by supply and demand. The firm doesn't and can't have any control over pricing in the theory. That is the only way that you can have a self-regulating free market. Duh.
* marginal revenue equals marginal costs. That is the price for the entire production and sales of a producer is equal to the marginal costs of the last possible item that can be produced. There are many problems with this theory, not the least of which is that in a modern industrial economy it would eliminate any profits. It isn't MR > MC.
To understand neoclassical economics is to understand its weaknesses and its failure to explain the economy that we have today. A failure that you freely admit in this post.
Yes, neoclassical economics says that a wage increase will result in workers having to be laid off. But it is not because the demand for labor is reduced as dismal constantly maintains. In neoclassical economics you would have to lay off workers because their wages exceed the cost of the marginal product, the very last product that the production facility can produce.
Yes and a business owner understands it as cash out becomes greater than cash in, things have to change.
Yes, if we raise the minimum wage too far too fast there could be firms pushed into losing money. As with all things moderation is the key. Or are we going back to the "why don't we raise the minimum wage to a hundred dollars an hour."
But macroeconomic policies work slowly. The proposed increase to $10.10 an hour over three years is a moderate increase to about what the minimum wage was in 1960's.
It is crazy for a profitable business to lay off workers because their wages increase. If you lay off workers you can't produce as many products as you did before the layoff. If you lay off the workers whose wages increased you will lose the entire sales volume of the laid off workers lost production. You lose all of the sales volume, including fixed cost coverage for that sales volume, making the remaining production's costs increase.
Yes and no. Your making the wrong assumption that because profits are up generally, all businesses are profitable. And that is not the case.
We make policies for the average or median firm, not for the outiters. The economy benefits from a few going out of business. Highlight this, "creative destruction" and read.
Once again you have failed to address my point. If you lay off workers you lose their production and the entire amount of money that you would have earned from the sales of the product.