Government revenues are at their lowest share of the economy since 1950
and the US has the lowest tax burden of almost any industrialized country.
He's being silly... last I heard Government had grown to where 24% of the American economy was related to Government.Interesting, I did not know this.
He's being silly... last I heard Government had grown to where 24% of the American economy was related to Government.
-John
Government spending is not constrained by revenues
, so saying new taxes would prompt more spending is silliness.
If you get at the root of the issue, "blaming Republicans" is intellectually dishonest (but typical). The "negotiations" have been characterized as thus:
Republicans: "Cut spending"
Democrats: "Increase taxes"
Republicans: "Cut spending"
Democrats: "Increase taxes"
Republicans: "Cut spending"
Democrats: "Increase taxes"
Republicans: "Cut spending"
Democrats: "Increase taxes"
Republicans: "Cut spending"
Democrats: "Increase taxes"
Republicans: "Cut spending"
Democrats: "Increase taxes"
Republicans: "This is pointless, see ya!"
That's not negotiating, by either party. Thus since both groups failed to make a good-faith effort the blame shall be laid at all their feet.
He's being silly... last I heard Government had grown to where 24% of the American economy was related to Government.
-John
A balanced budget amendment would shackle the US government in a similar way as the gold standard did without any commensurate benefit. That's a pretty bad idea.
I think I can speak for most of the people in America.Deficits play a large part in funding it though. The problem is that "big government" isn't being paid for via taxation, it is being borrowed against.
Taxes as a percentage of GDP are near all time lows. Government spending is not however, and that is because we have such large annual deficits.
We certainly need cuts, but we also need more revenues. We don't just need enough to cover our overspending, we need enough to start working on paying down the existing debt.
If you get at the root of the issue, "blaming Republicans" is intellectually dishonest (but typical). The "negotiations" have been characterized as thus:
Republicans: "Cut spending"
Democrats: "Increase taxes"
Republicans: "Cut spending"
Democrats: "Increase taxes"
Republicans: "Cut spending"
Democrats: "Increase taxes"
Republicans: "Cut spending"
Democrats: "Increase taxes"
Republicans: "Cut spending"
Democrats: "Increase taxes"
Republicans: "Cut spending"
Democrats: "Increase taxes"
Republicans: "This is pointless, see ya!"
That's not negotiating, by either party. Thus since both groups failed to make a good-faith effort the blame shall be laid at all their feet.
You want to rape Gazillionares?Let's extended the tax cuts to the gazillionaire "job creators" another 10 years! They have been doing such a fine job helping out that little pesky unemployment issue in the country why not keep it up.
You CAN'T cut taxes and start two wars and expect the economy to be fine.
Oh wait, too late...
Do a Clinton, and go for a balanced budget.
Talk to me then.
-John
You want to rape Gazillionares?
Funky 🙂
-John
Jhnn,Highly inaccurate It's more like this-
Republicans: "cut spending"
Democrats: "OK, but we need to raise revenues, too"
Republicans: "Cut taxes at the top some more" (Ryan budget)
Democrats: "But we need to increase revenues"
Republicans: "No we don't. We need more cuts so we can reduce taxes at the top. cut! cut! cut!"
Democrats: "Maybe we can cut the military"
Republicans: "NO!"
Democrats: "then we need to increase revenues"
Republicans: "Cut Elmo, cut SS. cut medicare. cut infrastructure. cut the IRS, SEC, CDC, and anything else we can, but not the military"
That's really the way it goes. Republicans really are trying to crash the economy, destroy the govt. The financial elite will emerge even stronger than before, because in the kingdom of the blind, the one eyed man is king... and they'll make us all blind if they can.
What is also logical is the fact that the drop in revenue is completely due to the recession and nothing else.Government spending is not constrained by revenues, so saying new taxes would prompt more spending is silliness.
Government revenues are at their lowest share of the economy since 1950, and the US has the lowest tax burden of almost any industrialized country. Revenues now are well below their modern average. If you wish to reduce deficits, a return to a more normal revenue situation is only logical.
Somebody up above already explained that if Government raises taxes, they spend it.Clinton raised taxes first.
Wrong!! That 24% is just Federal Government land.He's being silly... last I heard Government had grown to where 24% of the American economy was related to Government.
-John
Any rational person can see that our deficit cannot be closed by spending cuts alone, there will have to be tax increases. I personally cannot fathom that the Republicans are so ideologically crazed and so irresponsible as to actually hold to their no tax pledge.
I imagine they are just trying to strengthen their hand right now. It's already deeply irresponsible of them to play chicken with the debt ceiling like this, but I guess the great part about democracy is that we get exactly the government we deserve. Americans were dumb enough to elect these fools, so... yeah.
What is also logical is the fact that the drop in revenue is completely due to the recession and nothing else.
Bush's last tax cut took place in 2003! Look at the graph and notice that revenue as a percentage of GDP went UP after that tax cut!!!
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Notice how the graph goes to hell post 2007? There were no tax cuts during those years!
In 2007 the year before the recession started tax revenue was 18.5% of GDP. Historically that is above the post WW 2 average.
http://www.taxpolicycenter.org/taxfacts/displayafact.cfm?Docid=205
The simple fact is that if you want to raise revenue then you should stop worrying about tax rates, which haven't changed in 8 years, and instead work at getting the economy fixed. Fix the economy and taxes revenue will come too.
Shackling the government is the benefit.
Just one of the many reasons why we were better off on the gold standard and the main reason a balanced budget amendment would be great, then the beast could actually be starved.