The Tax Issue: Why I voted for Obama
I voted for Barack Obama because of only one issue: the Bush tax cuts.
Republican presidential candidate John McCain campaigned on a promise of extending Bush's tax reductions for the rich, as well as subtracting another 80+ billion dollars from their tax bills. Obama insisted he was going to kill the Bush tax giveaways sometime after taking office, and my research showed this was the only intelligent thing to do.
The Bush tax cuts are one of the major reasons why only slightly more than 2 million private sector jobs have been created since June 2001 (less by the time you read this). On a per year average, this is the most pathetic job growth for any business expansion in United States history, no matter what criteria is used. The tax breaks are also a major reason why per capita real family income plummeted over $2,000 per year since Bush took office.
Republicans assume that if you give the rich such favors, they’ll invest their money and magically create jobs; but that’s not how most publicly traded limited liability corporations work.
When Bush slashed taxes for the investor class, he gave them billions of dollars they wouldn’t otherwise have had. CEO’s hungrily eyed the newly available cash because the stock markets had experienced large losses since the end of the Clinton years. In a time of weak demand, CEO’s needed to entice the beneficiaries of Bush’s generosity into purchasing their stocks, thereby bidding up their prices. In industry after industry, they did this by pushing up profits and dividends; and they achieved this by shipping jobs overseas, by laying people off and by cutting or holding steady real wages, salaries and benefits.
This is precisely how the Bush tax giveaways placed downward pressure on the growth of jobs, wages, salaries and benefits. And that’s why a ballot marked for McCain was a vote for increasing joblessness during the current financial crisis.
And here is where those tax cuts especially come into play. The problem with the U.S. economy isn't the sub-prime mess. That's only a symptom of the real problem. The mal-distribution of income and wealth during the past thirty years has created the current economic meltdown (That’s another story).
Obama’s stimulus may drag the economy out of the recession sometime next year, but without repealing the tax cuts, there should be a relatively swift return to economic meltdown after a short and feeble business expansion.
That’s why the president-elect should raise capital gains and income tax rates closer to fifty percent for any income beyond $250,000. Less money would then be available to bid up stock prices, and this would relieve pressure on CEO’s to cut jobs, wages, salaries and benefits.
To see the obvious, one only has to look at what occurred when President Clinton raised the top tax rate: record job creation, middle incomes rising in real terms, and the already giant wealth and income gap began to close, however slightly.
We also can’t forget the economy boomed from 1940 through the early 1960s, despite a 91 percent top tax rate. But those tax codes gave the affluent class incentives to invest in ways that helped the middle class sustain and grow; and this allowed many millionaires to pay a real tax rate far below 91 percent.
Obama and the Democrats would be doing all citizens a favor by raising the top tax rates while giving the wealthy tax breaks if they invest their money in industries that ensure domestic job, wage, salary, and benefits growth. Ultimately, this is what an economy is for, and that’s why Obama should follow through with his pledge to immediately reverse Bush’s tax cut folly.
Showing posts with label capital gains taxes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label capital gains taxes. Show all posts
Monday, December 29, 2008
Sunday, November 23, 2008
Obama Economically Foolish
President elect Barack Obama is not going to increase taxes on the rich, and he is being pressured by republicans to reduce capital gains and corporate taxes. He has no option: He must increase all of those taxes because doing so will increase jobs. And right now in the middle of a recession is the time to do it.
Obama seems to be heading economically center-right, with a dash of green economics thrown in as a concession to the progressives of the Democratic Party, such as Henry Waxman. But this economy needs to head hard left before it can move back to the right.
Decreasing taxes on the rich will only curtail job growth. Bush tried to do this; and from June 2001 to now less than 3 million private sector jobs were created, an all time low. If Obama wants to continue a policy of low job growth and declining family income, reducing the taxes on the rich is the way to go.
See the article below on why I voted for Obama and you will discover why tax cuts for the rich destroy jobs.
Obama seems to be heading economically center-right, with a dash of green economics thrown in as a concession to the progressives of the Democratic Party, such as Henry Waxman. But this economy needs to head hard left before it can move back to the right.
Decreasing taxes on the rich will only curtail job growth. Bush tried to do this; and from June 2001 to now less than 3 million private sector jobs were created, an all time low. If Obama wants to continue a policy of low job growth and declining family income, reducing the taxes on the rich is the way to go.
See the article below on why I voted for Obama and you will discover why tax cuts for the rich destroy jobs.
Labels:
Bush tax cuts,
capital gains taxes,
corporate taxes,
obama
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