Friday, June 10, 2011

The Resilence of Zombie Lies.....

The 10th anniversary of the Bush tax cuts was early this week, and it is safe to say that they were pretty much the mistake economists said they would be.

Annie Lowry does a great job of summing up just how spectacular they were at not accomplishing anything they were predicted:

In 2001, the Bush administration inherited a few years' worth of budget surpluses, so it decided to cut income tax rates, double the child-care credit, and sharply reduce the levies on investment income. The economy then slowed, even entering a brief recession. As a form of stimulus, the administration doubled down, expanding and hastening the 2001 changes. Bush promised that the tax cuts would do a whole lot more than put money in people's pockets—which, in fact, they did. He said they would "starve the beast," forcing Congress to reduce the size and scope of government. He promised they would increase the prosperity of all Americans. He also vowed: "Tax relief will create new jobs. Tax relief will generate new wealth. And tax relief will open new opportunities."

.....What about the president's claims? Take his pledge that the cuts would spur job growth. To be fair, we'll ignore employment changes during 2008, the year the Great Recession seized the economy. During the 2001 to 2007 business cycle, America's economy enjoyed 52 straight months of job growth. But it was sluggish—in fact, the slowest rate of jobs growth on record since World War II, and just one-fifth the pace of the 1990s.

Then there's wealth. Put simply, the aughts were a decade of income stagnation: The tax cuts failed to bolster most taxpayers' earnings, even before the recession hit. Median real wages actually dropped from 2003 to 2007. Household income from business-cycle peak to business-cycle peak declined for the first time since tracking started in 1967. As documented by my colleague Timothy Noah in his series "The United States of Inequality," this did not hold true for the nation's billionaires and millionaires. Garden-variety high-wage earners saw their income go up. And incomes for the top 1 percent skyrocketed. For some people, obviously, the cuts "generated new wealth," in the president's phrase. But overall, inequality got worse.


Interestingly enough....this is virtually the same exact logic that Gov. Tim Pawlenty is using.
Whatever the problem, tax cuts are the solution. Economic boom? Tax cuts! Economic Recession? Tax cuts!!!! Global warming? Well that doesn't exist...but if it did...TAX CUTS!!!!!

Not make light of the subject, but honestly there is a time an a place for cutting taxes. This just isn't it, especially when you are going to run around screaming about the debt.

-Cheers

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