hal2kilo
Lifer
- Feb 24, 2009
- 26,364
- 12,503
- 136
You can't give "tax cuts" to the poor. Roughly 50% of the country does not pay anything in federal income taxes (payroll taxes, local taxes, state taxes, sales tax etc are different matters). You can't cut taxation that's currently at 0, unless you want to use the tax code as a welfare system. That's already being done with certain tax credits etc by the way.
Your argument basically boils down to "cutting taxes for the wealthy is not the most effective way to boost economic activity". I'd agree with that, but that isn't the sole reason behind the tax cuts. Last time I checked the tax code was not intended primarily as a tool to boost the economy. So, if someone says "hey, we need to stimulate the economy, what shall we do?", then I'd agree that lowering tax rates on the wealthy is not the most effective tool to do it.
That's the same point you made earlier, and yes, giving money to the lower and middle classes is more likely to generate more economic activity. I don't think there's much disagreement about that.
I disagree with that one, at least to a degree. True, companies are not going to hire if the demand isn't there. However, for many companies, the demand is there to justify hiring more people to do the work, but the company is tightening it's belt and holding the line on adding more people. They are making workers work harder, doing more with less. Given incentives -- and probably more importantly -- more clarity on the future tax / regulatory environment, companies will hire again.
Back to the same point: you're arguing that tax cuts for the wealthy are not the best tool in the arsenal to stimulate the economy. I don't think very many would disagree with that notion. However, we're talking about two different things.
First, the tax code / tax system itself. I'd say it needs to be overhauled and we need to do some fundamental analysis of how taxes are paid etc to streamline the entire tax code.
The second issue (to your points) is stimulating the economy. That's an entirely different discussion. Tax cuts for the wealthy would help but are not going to be the most effective tool for stimulus. There's also a simple issue of fairness: if you cut taxes for everyone, why should someone who's working hard to earn more not also get a break? Are you just making a judgment that wealthy people somehow are less deserving to hang on to the money they've earned than someone else?
Someone who has a little time can go look this up, but I don't think the average family of 4 making $30k to $40k is paying a whole lot in federal taxes anyway, so there's not much to cut there. You're really going to have to tackle the $40k to $150k brackets and up to get into real dollars. There's also the issue of essentially robbing those who produce to hand the money over to those who don't. People who need help should get it, but taking money from those who produce to those who don't is a fundamentally flawed idea so you have to be very careful about using tax code to effect socially "just" outcomes.
Having discussions about tax policy etc could be very productive, but it always gets drowned out into class warfare/socialist/evil rich/lazy poor blah blah discussion which is pointless.
I know what your technical argument is goint to about this. But I don't give a frig.
Silly poor people pay no social security taxes, or local taxes huh. Which happens to be a significant portion of their income, leaving very little disposable income.
But, bleat on, and defend the people who need no help what so ever.
