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fantomas
Has anyone else read this excellent and fair piece by John Cassidy in the current New Yorker? I definitely recommend it, whether you agree with W's economic actions so far or not; much of it you may already know, but a lot of it...whew! The most chilling bit comes at the end.

New Yorker: Tax Code

QUOTE
Most people already know that Bush’s tax cuts favored the rich, but the size of the giveaway was startling. Based on figures contained in a recent study from the Congressional Budget Office, it now appears that about two-thirds of the benefits went to households in the top fifth of the income distribution, and about one third went to households in the top one-hundredth of the distribution. To put it another way, families earning $1.2 million a year—that is, the richest one per cent in the country—received a tax break of roughly $78,500. Families earning $57,000 a year—middle-income families—got a tax cut of about $1,100.

Even these numbers, though, do not convey the full ambition of the Republicans’ agenda, which potentially involves a historic restructuring of the American system of government. Roughly two-thirds of taxable income is paid to workers in the form of wages and benefits. The other third goes to reward capital, or accumulated savings, in the form of corporate profits, dividends, and interest payments. If Bush’s economic agenda was fully enacted, the vast bulk of these payments wouldn’t be taxed at all, and labor would end up shouldering practically the entire burden of financing the federal government. In a new book, “Neoconomy: George Bush’s Revolutionary Gamble with America’s Future,” Daniel Altman, a former economics reporter for the Times and The Economist, describes what such a system might look like. “The fortunate and growing minority who managed to receive all their income from stocks, bonds and other securities would pay nothing—not a dime—for America’s cancer research, its international diplomacy, its military deterrent, the maintenance of the interstate highway system, the space program or almost anything else the federal government did. . . . Broadly speaking, that fortunate minority would be free-riders.”

A return to the Victorian world of rentiers and laborers may seem like an outlandish scenario, but a generation ago it would have been difficult to imagine a White House, even a Republican one, phasing out the inheritance tax, which affects only a tiny minority of the richest families, and slashing the taxes on dividends and capital gains, which few middle-class families pay, either. The people who devised these policies simply do not accept the old rules. Glenn Hubbard, for instance, told me that the progressive income tax “discourages entrepreneurship and risk-taking. We have to trade off our interest in fairness with those costs. I, like many conservative economists, care a lot about progressivity at the bottom. President Bush, for example, made the Earned Income Tax Credit”—a handout to low-income families—“more generous. But progressivity at the top? I don’t know. That just sounds like envy to me.”
bobby78751
He's president for God's sake. He has failed to put any successful plan into motion, why should the sheep continue to follow him to their slaughter. Face it, nothing he has ever done has ever worked. He screwed up the economy in Texas during his second term and every job he has ever had has turned into a total failure. Don't drop the bomb, drop the bum!
RazorbackTX
Leave no billionare behind.
Maybe one more tax cut for the rich and we'll "turn that corner."
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