http://blogs.wsj.com/economics/2015/04/20/tax-cuts-boost-jobs-just-not-when-targeted-at-rich/
Apparently fresh water bastion University of Chicago also swallows the communist pill as well.
Srsly, people without degrees in economics have been saying that more money in the hands of people with a higher propensity to consume is much more stimulative than more money in the hands of people with a higher propensity to save. What's taken the degreed professionals so long to catch up?
And will this change anything policywise? Probably not.
“The positive relationship between tax cuts and employment growth is largely driven by tax cuts for lower-income groups and the effect of tax cuts for the top 10% on employment growth is small,” writes Owen Zidar, a professor at the University of Chicago’s Booth School of Business.
. . .
“I find that the stimulative effects of income tax cuts are largely driven by tax cuts for the bottom 90% and that the empirical link between employment growth and tax changes for upper-income earners is weak to negligible over a business cycle frequency,” Mr. Zidar writes.
Apparently fresh water bastion University of Chicago also swallows the communist pill as well.
Srsly, people without degrees in economics have been saying that more money in the hands of people with a higher propensity to consume is much more stimulative than more money in the hands of people with a higher propensity to save. What's taken the degreed professionals so long to catch up?
And will this change anything policywise? Probably not.
