l****z 发帖数: 29846 | 1 by Dustin Siggins
On Wednesday afternoon, Center for American Progress reporter Scott Keyes
reported on comments made by Utah Republican Senator Mike Lee. According to
Keyes on Think Progress:
Cloaking his predilection for the rich as concern for the less fortunate
, Sen. Mike Lee (R-UT) argued Wednesday that raising taxes on the wealthy
would primarily hurt the poor. Lee's comments came on former Arkansas Gov.
Mike Huckabee's (R) radio show as the two discussed the looming fiscal
showdown in Congress.
….
This prospect, frequently repeated by conservatives, that raising taxes
on the wealthy will decimate the economy and destroy job creation (and thus
hurt the poor) is simply not supported by empirical evidence. As these three
graphs show, the nation's best GDP growth and job creation rate in the last
60 years actually occurred when the top marginal income tax rate was
between 75 and 80 percent. The worst period for both measurements occurred
when the top rate was 35 percent, as it stands today. In fact, job growth
and gross domestic product has little, if any, correlation to the tax rate
on wealthy Americans.
Unfortunately, Keyes' opinionated article misses two key qualifiers in
explaining the full picture related to job growth and tax rates:
First, as I explained last week in a post at Newsbusters refuting similarly
misleading statements by Paul Krugman about tax rates and the economy, today
's economy is not comparable to the one seen decades long-gone, for two
primary reasons: first, we didn't have a growing entitlements crisis decades
ago. Second, we had never-before-seen economic dominance in the decades
following World War II, dominance that is not seen at all today, and our
leadership in the field of education has slipped dramatically. So it is
wishful thinking to compare today's economy to the one seen when tax rates
were at 80%.
While Keyes is not a Nobel Prize-winning economist, it's disappointing that
he failed to provide context to a key part of his article.
Second, the history of tax increases on the rich shows a distinct impact on
the non-rich. Consider that the individual income tax and Alternative
Minimum Tax originally targeted the uber-wealthy, yet now greatly impact the
middle-class and lower-middle-class. And as graphed by the think tank Just
Facts, the Congressional Budget Office expects "bracket creep" to raise
taxes on all Americans -- including a 71% increase over the next 25 years on
a two-parent family with two kids earning the median income.
Now, technically, Lee was making an economic, not a tax argument, against
tax increases on the wealthy. But since Keyes never makes this clear, it's
perfectly legitimate to point out how the liberal inclination towards taxing
the rich invariably taxes the non-rich.
The Center for American Progress is decidedly liberal, and has been credibly
accused of having an unusually close relationship with the Obama
Administration, which seems to have made taxing the top 2% of earners its
first post-election priority. Never mind that the top 1% earns 50 times as
much as the bottom 20%, on average, yet pay 1,500 times as much in taxes. Or
that raising taxes on the top 2% of earners would only pay for 1.88% of the
next decade's spending.
Even the Washington Post's editorial page is calling for President Obama's
leadership on entitlement reform to prevent a fiscal crisis, one that would
definitely impact the poor the most. Yet Think Progress and much of the rest
of the liberal establishment are refusing to acknowledge these facts, and
would rather focus on economically harmful class warfare. |
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