10 DAYS TO GO! Robert Reich lays it out for all of us in plain, simple language. Pres Obama will continue to lead the country out of the recession or mitt robme romney will lead us closer to a plutocracy, turning even more of the nations wealth over to his corporate masters. Nothing good will come from a romney presidency, and the damage from 4 years of a romney administration will take at least a decade to repair. Think I exaggerate? Look how long it has taken to begin to recover from the failed tax and economic policies of the george w bush administration. romney will eliminate to progress we have made and return us to another recession and possibly a depression that we may never recover from. From HuffPost....
As we go into the final days of a dismal presidential campaign where
too many issues have been fudged or eluded -- and the media only want to
talk about is who's up and who's down -- the biggest issue on which the
candidates have given us the clearest choice is whether the rich should
pay more in taxes.
President Obama says emphatically yes. He proposes ending the Bush
tax cut for people earning more than $250,000 a year, and requiring that
the richest 1 percent pay no less than a third of their income in
taxes, the so-called "Buffett Rule."
Mitt Romney says emphatically no. He proposes cutting tax rates on
the rich by 20 percent, extending the Bush tax cut for the wealthy, and
reducing or eliminating taxes on dividends and capital gains.
Romney says he'll close loopholes and eliminate deductions used by
the rich so that their share of total taxes remains the same as it is
now, although he refuses to specify what loopholes or deductions. But
even if we take him at his word, under no circumstances would he
increase the amount of taxes they pay.
Obama is right.
America faces a huge budget deficit. And just about everyone who's
looked at how to reduce it -- the non-partisan Congressional Budget
Office, the bi-partisan Simpson-Bowles Commission, and almost all
independent economists and analysts -- have come up with some
combination of spending cuts and tax increases.
The practical question is who pays those increased taxes. If Romney's
view prevails and the rich don't pay more, everyone else has to pay
more.
That's nonsensical. The rich are far richer than they used to be,
while most of the rest of us are poorer. The latest data show the top 1
percent garnering 93 percent of all the gains from the recovery so far.
But median family income is 8 percent lower than it was in 2000,
adjusted for inflation.
The gap has been widening for three decades. Since 1980 the top 1
percent has doubled its share of the nation's total income -- from 10
percent to 20 percent. The share of the top one-tenth of 1 percent has
tripled. The share of the top-most one-one hundredth of 1 percent --
16,000 families -- has quadrupled. The richest 400 Americans now have
more wealth than the bottom 150 million of us put together.
Meanwhile, the tax rates paid by the wealthy have dropped
precipitously. Before 1981 the top marginal tax rate was never lower
than 70 percent. Under President Dwight Eisenhower it was 93 percent.
Even after taking all the deductions and tax credits available to them,
the rich paid around 54 percent.
The top tax rate is now only 35 percent and the tax on capital gains
(increases in the value of investments) is only 15 percent. Since so
much of what they earn is from capital gains, many of the super-rich,
like Mitt Romney himself, pay 14 percent or less. That's a lower tax
rate than many middle-class Americans pay.
In fact, if you add up all the taxes paid -- not just on income and
capital gains but also payroll taxes (which don't apply to income above
incomes of $110,100), and sales taxes -- most of us are paying a higher
percent of our income in taxes than are those at the top.
So how can anyone argue against raising taxes on the rich? Easy. They
say it will slow the economy because the rich are "job creators."
In the immortal words of Joe Biden, that's malarkey.
The economy did just fine during the three decades after World War
II, when the top tax rate never fell below 70 percent. Average yearly
economic growth was higher in those years than it's been since, when
taxes on the rich have been far lower.
Bill Clinton raised taxes on the rich and the economy did wonderfully well. George W. Bush cut them and the economy slowed.
The real job creators are America's vast middle class, whose spending
encourages businesses to expand and hire -- and whose lack of spending
has the opposite effect.
That's why the recovery has been painfully slow. So much income and
wealth have gone to the top that the vast majority of Americans in the
middle don't have the purchasing power to get the economy moving again.
The rich save most of what they earn, and their savings go anywhere
around the world where they can get the highest return.
It would be insane to compound the damage by raising taxes on the middle class and not on the rich.
Logic, fairness, and common sense dictate that the rich pay more in
taxes. It's the key to avoiding January's fiscal cliff and coming up
with a "grand bargain" on taming the budget deficit. And it's central to
getting the economy back on track.
ROBERT B. REICH, Chancellor's Professor of Public Policy at the
University of California at Berkeley, was Secretary of Labor in the
Clinton administration. Time Magazine named him one of the ten most
effective cabinet secretaries of the last century. He has written
thirteen books, including the best sellers "Aftershock" and "The Work of
Nations." His latest is an e-book, "Beyond Outrage," now available in
paperback. He is also a founding editor of the American Prospect
magazine and chairman of Common Cause.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/robert-reich/the-final-days-the-bigges_b_2035673.html?utm_source=Alert-blogger&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Email%2BNotifications
No comments:
Post a Comment