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Old 07-13-2006, 01:39 PM   #8 (permalink)
Jaxian
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All right, this article is sort of twisting statistics, I think. Let's take a closer look at it.

Quote:
Originally Posted by article
Want more proof? President Bill Clinton, you just saw him. He was a "tax the rich" guy. In the middle of his two terms, 1995, the federal government took in $1.5 trillion in tax receipts -- $1.5 trillion. Ten years later, 2005, the middle of President Bush's term, the Feds took in $2.1 trillion, 40 percent more than under Clinton!
Tax revenue has increased under every single president because of inflation. This author seems to ignore that. Had tax revenue decreased under Bush, we'd be having a real problem.

Take a look at this graph. It is adjusted for inflation:

http://www.heritage.org/research/fea...harts_C/c1.cfm

From this graph, we can see that tax revenue was at its highest under Clinton in 2000, not under Bush, despite what the article says. Not only that, Clinton was the only president fiscally responsible enough to keep his revenue higher than his spending.

Sgt pointed out that JFK and Reagan cut spending yet saw an increase in revenue. But again, so has every president. By far the fastest and most extreme increase in revenue occurred under Clinton. Revenue increased other under presidents, but it didn't increase as quickly.

Quote:
According to the latest stats, tax revenues are climbing twice as fast as predicted and the deficit is being sharply cut.
This is simply not true. The deficit is not being sharply cut at all. The deficit is continually getting larger under Bush.

Looking at this graph, we can see that Bush has had a pretty high deficit throughout his presidency:

http://www.uuforum.org/deficit.htm

And looking at this graph:

http://zfacts.com/p/318.html

we can see that the deficit sharply increases, not only under the Bush administrations, but also under the Reagan administration. On the other hand, it sharply decreases under the Clinton administration.

This indicates that presidents who decrease taxes are either increasing spending, or are simpy not making enough profit from their lower taxes. On the other hand, the president who increased taxes had plenty of money to handle his budget and lower the debt.

Quote:
But it's not really about lower taxes, is it? It's all about the federal government taking money away from affluent Americans and giving it to those less well off. That's what Krugman and his merry band really want. They think unfettered capitalism is bad, income redistribution is good.
"Income redistribution" is a misleading term. Capitalism is a method of income distribution in itself. Altering the way we tax people is merely altering the system we use to distribute income. We don't use pure capitalism, we use a slightly different technique. The Supreme Court which ruled that the income tax is Constitutional agreed with this understanding.

People sometimes think that if pure Capitalism would give somebody money, then he deserves that money, and any attempt to give him less money than pure Capitalism is a "redistribution of wealth". But the premise that the wealthy are more deserving of wealth isn't really justifiable. It cannot really be said that the wealthy work harder nor contribute more nor are more moral.

I don't mean to say that Capitalism is a bad thing. Capitalism encourages production, which makes life better for everyone. But let's not pretend that Capitalism accurately determines who deserves lots of wealth and who deserves little. Capitalism is what it is: an economic system designed to maximize production and acquisition of goods and services for everyone.

Quote:
So please, no more tax cuts for the rich nonsense. With the Bush administration spending like crazy, with high gas prices, with an expensive War on Terror, the USA should be in a deep recession. And the main reason the country is not is because Americans continue to spend and invest. Lower taxes mean more prosperity for everyone. No spin.
This paragraph is incorrect. First, the amount of spending Bush is doing will have a present-day boost to our economy because it brings more wealth into the market. The long-term effects will be negative because we'll eventually have to send out far more money than we put in based on our debt, but today we should see a stronger economy because of this spending.

Second, while gas prices are of some consequence to the economy, they are not of significant consequence at their current level. They are more likely to reduce the living quality of the average person than they are to cause a loss of jobs.

Based on the numbers I posted above, it should be pretty clear that lowering taxes does not increase revenue. For those of you who claim that Reagan's tax cuts increased revenue, well take a look at that first graph. Revenue increase was looking pretty average until Clinton came into office.

Now I do often support lowering taxes, for lowering taxes can provide a slight boost our economy. But let's not imagine that it also increases tax revenue. We will not see an economic lift so great that we remake the money we would have made in taxes. Go ahead and support tax cuts, but don't pretend that tax cuts will magically increase the amount of money the government makes. Tax cuts will decrease that money; realize this downside of cutting taxes.

I should also mention that it is quite debatable that tax cuts on the lower class would improve our economy just as much as tax cuts on the wealthy. After all, both sorts of tax cuts put money into the economy, and the lower class will also spend and invest their money. The democrats who criticize Bush's tax cuts on the wealthy may have been meaning to move those tax cuts to the middle and lower class. John Kerry, for example, campaigned on elevating taxes on the wealthy while decreasing taxes on the middle and lower class.
-Jaxian

Last edited by Jaxian; 07-13-2006 at 01:42 PM.