Tax Cuts Which Hurt The Poor

With Sean Hannity, and his ilk, we hear over and over and over again, the virtues of Bush’s tax cuts.

The Bush administration Tax Cut, with all it’s hoopla, really amounts to a policy of leaving no rich person behind, to wit:

http://www.ctj.org/html/gwb0602.htm

And the most alarming fact is stated:

By 2010, when (and if) the Bush tax reductions are fully in place, an astonishing 52 percent of the total tax cuts will go to the richest one percent—whose average 2010 income will be $1.5 million. Their tax-cut windfall in that year alone will average $85,000 each. Put another way, of the estimated $234 billion in tax cuts scheduled for the year 2010, $121 billion will go just 1.4 million taxpayers.

Also, Bush has given these rich-favorable tax cuts without a concomitant reduction in government spending, a double sin.

This widens the deficit. An ever widening deficit ultimately devalues the dollar, which causes a host of assorted economic problems, one of which is inflation (by virtue of the fact that the Fed has to lower the discount rate in order to prop up the economy. See, what happens is inflation caused the housing market to conjure up some fancy mortgage tools in order to allow people to afford to buy homes, which ultimately gave rise to the subprime fiasco we are in, today).

Here’s the killer: inflation is a tax on the poor, because the rich benefit from inflation, since they can hedge their investments and thereby preserve their wealth, whereas the poor do not have access to such methods. If all an individual has is $800 in savings, how likely is it that an individual who needs liquidity just to meet basic needs is going to buy a Krugerrand?

If a man or woman has $1000 in savings, which can purchase a value of X in goods this year, but next year that $1000 in savings can only purchase ten percent less, then, due to inflation, he or she has paid a hidden tax of ten per cent. Because of a deficit, the Government prints money to make up its cash shortfalls (this is a simplification, but ultimately, this does occur), which ultimately results in inflation.

See, the rich hedged by buying gold, or whatever upward moving financial instrument they purchased in order to preserve their wealth.

Republicans, in their litany of lies, lie again, and on this particular issue, the lie is beyond egregious.

Sean Hannity, on the Hannity & Colmes television program, no matter who is on to debate whatever, rarely fails to steer the conversation in a right versus left direction.

How often do we hear him say that to vote for a democrat is to vote for higher taxes?

But this is the lie that the right is perpetrating on the masses. Democrats only want taxes for those who can afford it. They do not want to raise taxes on those who cannot afford it, and the more responsible Democrats certainly do not want a tax cut without an accompanying reduction in spending to match it. By the way, this idea is supported by McCain, who, on that issue, is correct (insofar as his support of tying tax cuts to concomitant spending reductions. However, he doesn’t seem to mind that Bush’s tax cuts favor the rich).

And, which President was it who left his office with a budget surplus in the last fifty years? I’ll give you a hint: it was a Democrat (Bill Clinton).

During the last 60 years, Republicans were in the White House 57.2 per cent of the time.

During those years the Republicans controlled the White House, stock gains averaged 9.53% per year. During the years in which Democrats were in the White House, stock gains averaged 15.25%. Ah, so you thought or assumed that the stock market would fair better under Republican authority, did you?

Under which President in the last 60 years did the stark market yield the highest gains? I’ll give you another hint, it was not a Republican president (it was Clinton, again).

Give a million dollar tax cut to the poor, and you are going to see a lot of TV sets, etc,  the kinds of hard purchases which really causes jobs.

Give a million dollar tax cut to the rich, and what is purchased? A Van Gogh, A Picasso, which might cause a singular spurt of activity in job market for 15 minutes at a Sotheby’s auction?

Oh, that’s a straw man, you say? Not really, there is a difference between a simplification which accurately represents a larger picture, over the simplistic, which often resorts to straw man arguments which do not represent reality. The above idea presented is the the former catagory.

No, the Democrats are not without sin insofar as allowing the Fed to cause inflation, it’s true. However, I am more inclined to believe a Democrat will fight for responsible fiscal policy more than a Republican would.

The Republicans will tell you otherwise, but their deeds do not support it. They suffer from the simplistic idea that a tax cut is the panacea for the nation’s economic problems.

A tax cut without an accompanying reduction in Goverment spending is a tax on the poor. Not directly, but inevitably via inflation.

In essence, inflation is a transfer of wealth from the poor and the middle class to the Government.

The rich are untouched.

1 Comment

  1. ritvars said,

    April 8, 2008 at 12:39 am

    By 2010, when (and if) the Bush tax reductions are fully in place, an astonishing 52 percent of the total tax cuts will go to the richest one percent—whose average 2010 income will be $1.5 million.
    To gauge proportionality, one should compare percentage of tax cuts to percentage of taxes thay pay. Unfortunately, the second number is missing.

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