News Should the Bush tax cuts be extended?

  • Thread starter Thread starter jduster
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    taxes
Click For Summary
Raising taxes during a recession is viewed as a risky move, especially when considering the impact on the economy. The proposal to let tax breaks expire for the top 2% of earners, those making over $250,000, is seen as a necessary step to avoid further borrowing from China to fund tax cuts for the wealthy. Critics argue that the current tax structure disproportionately benefits the rich without stimulating domestic job growth or wealth creation. There is also concern about the bias in discussions surrounding tax cuts, particularly the lack of options for reducing taxes in polls. Overall, the consensus is that the existing tax cuts for the wealthy should not be extended, as they contribute to the federal deficit without providing tangible economic benefits.

Should the Bush tax cuts be extended?

  • Extend all of the Bush tax cuts permanently

    Votes: 16 45.7%
  • Extend some of the Bush tax cuts permanently

    Votes: 5 14.3%
  • Extend some of the Bush tax cuts temporarily

    Votes: 12 34.3%
  • Extend all of the Bush tax cuts temporarily

    Votes: 2 5.7%

  • Total voters
    35
jduster
Messages
2
Reaction score
0
In the midst of a recession, it is a poor idea to hike taxes, as that would be a gamble that this country should not have to take.
 
Physics news on Phys.org
The plan is to allow the tax breaks to expire for the top 2% - people making over $250,000 annually. I think the top 2% of the country can live with a little less to invest in China.

Your poll isn't just a little biased, is it?
 
Where is the option for no extention of any tax cuts? Do Republican trolls PF now?
 
We borrowed money from the Chinese to give the rich tax cuts...and now people want to debate if we should keep doing it?!? Sheesh.
 
lisab said:
We borrowed money from the Chinese to give the rich tax cuts...and now people want to debate if we should keep doing it?!? Sheesh.

It gets better than that. We borrow money from China to give tax breaks to the rich, so that they can invest in China, which increases our trade deficit, which ultimately leads to more borrowing from China. Supply-side economics is reduced to a sad joke, in a global economy. The money from tax breaks for the rich doesn't trickle down, it trickles away [as a function of domestic vs foreign manufacturing].

An analysis of U.S.-China trade and FDI data shows that:
• The rapidly growing U.S. trade deficit with China is directly linked to the growth of multinational firms operating in China. Of China's more than $200 billion in exports in 1998, over 40% had their source in multinational firms operating in China (Ministry of Foreign Trade and Economic Cooperation 2000).

• The activities of U.S. multinational firms, together with China's protectionist trade policies, have had a significant role in increasing the U.S. trade deficit with China. A 10% increase in the level of U.S. direct investment in an industry in China is associated with a 7.3% increase in the volume of U.S. imports from China and a 2.1% decline in U.S. exports to China in that industry...

Even though U.S. direct investment abroad data for 1999 are not yet available, preliminary reports suggest that China, with an estimated $1.5 billion in FDI, has likely surpassed even Malaysia, which was estimated to have received $415 million (U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis 2000). U.S. FDI in China is linked to growing imports
http://www.epi.org/publications/entry/briefingpapers_fdi_fdi/
 
Last edited:
We should extend all tax cuts but remove the "Bush" from the name. Put a spin on it and call it "The American Tax Limit" and pass a bill that doesn't let it exceed.
 
cronxeh said:
Where is the option for no extention of any tax cuts?
Where is the option to cut taxes instead of just whether and how much to raise them?
Do Republican trolls PF now?
Obviously not, at least not the kind that favor tax cuts.
Ivan Seeking said:
Your poll isn't just a little biased, is it?
A little? I'd say a poll on taxes with that many options, but none for reducing taxes is more than a little biased.
 
Al are you kidding me? The thread is about whether extending the Bush tax cuts is a good idea, and all the options are "Extend ... the Bush tax cuts". It's not a thread about taxes in general
 
Office_Shredder said:
Al are you kidding me? The thread is about whether extending the Bush tax cuts is a good idea, and all the options are "Extend ... the Bush tax cuts". It's not a thread about taxes in general
Are you kidding me? Using the phrase "extend Bush tax cuts" to refer to neither raising nor lowering taxes is the primary bias.

The choices, in unbiased English, are:

1. Neither raise nor lower taxes.
2. Raise taxes some now.
3. Raise taxes some now and some more later.
4. Raise taxes later.

The bias is underlying, not explicit. One must be capable of thinking for themselves to recognize it.
 
  • #10
The Bush tax cuts phase out on their own. The default choice is do nothing, in which case they are not extended
 
  • #11
cronxeh said:
Where is the option for no extention of any tax cuts? Do Republican trolls PF now?

That's not nice. Republican's are people too. I think.

But anyways, I agree about the missing "no extension" omission.

It's not like we can't afford it. I once again see that American's are still pocketing away nearly 3 times as much money as they did 3 years ago.
http://www.marketwatch.com/story/savings-rate-dips-as-spending-up-04-in-july-2010-08-30"
The savings rate fell to 5.9% from 6.2% in June, which had been the highest level in a year.
...
The savings rate averaged 2.1% in 2007 prior to the recession.

I thought everyone was saving up for July holiday's back in June, but it appears that they were saving up for August's holidays.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
  • #12
Office_Shredder said:
The Bush tax cuts phase out on their own. The default choice is do nothing, in which case they are not extended
That is not exactly true. Congress is under no obligation to levy income taxes at all in future years. Considering a tax hike to be the "default" choice is absurd, even if power hungry politicians consider that the default choice.

But that's irrelevant to the fact that "extending tax cuts" used to mean neither raising nor lowering taxes is absurdly biased language. That's too easy to see to be worthy of serious discussion.

And the choices given range from leaving taxes at their current (way too oppressive) level, or raising them 3 different ways.
 
  • #13
Office_Shredder said:
The Bush tax cuts phase out on their own. The default choice is do nothing, in which case they are not extended

So... I was correct to not vote in this poll?

There should be a fifth bar in the tally then. Those that refused to vote.
 
  • #14
Al68 said:
That is not exactly true. Congress is under no obligation to levy income taxes at all in future years. Considering a tax hike to be the "default" choice is absurd, even if power hungry politicians consider that the default choice.

But that's irrelevant to the fact that "extending tax cuts" used to mean neither raising nor lowering taxes is absurdly biased language. That's too easy to see to be worthy of serious discussion.

It's not a tax hike, it's letting a tax cut expire. That's why they've been called "the Bush tax cuts" from the very beginning.

We can not afford to borrow more from China to let the rich continue to get a tax cut. We simply can not.
 
  • #15
lisab said:
It's not a tax hike, it's letting a tax cut expire.
LOL. Nice semantics there.
We can not afford to borrow more from China to let the rich continue to get a tax cut. We simply can not.
You say that as if we're referring to the government giving people money, instead of how much government should drain our economy by taxation. That kind of semantics is just absurd, even if all too common today.
 
  • #16
Al68 said:
LOL. Nice semantics there.You say that as if we're referring to the government giving people money, instead of how much government should drain our economy by taxation. That kind of semantics is just absurd, even if all too common today.

I would say the tax cuts in the first place were the most absurd.

Alan Greenspan agrees with me regarding Congress and the tax cuts:

I should say they should follow the law and let them lapse.
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2010-07-16/greenspan-says-congress-should-let-bush-era-tax-cuts-expire-transcript-.html"

We may not like taxes, but...

WOODRUFF: So to those interests who say but wait a minute, if you let these taxes go my taxes go up, it is going to depress growth?

GREENSPAN: Yes, it probably will, but I think we have no choice in doing that, because we have to recognize there are no solutions which are optimum. These are choices between bad and worse.

Hiding ones head in the sand isn't going to make problems go away, nor does not paying the bill.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
  • #17
lisab said:
We borrowed money from the Chinese to give the rich tax cuts...
Mostly - no. The US borrowed and spent far more money than was covered in the tax cuts.
 
Last edited:
  • #18
Why is "no" not an option in this poll?
 
  • #19
the omission of the "no" option wasn't because of bias. it was because of forgetfulness. i apologize.
 
  • #20
jduster said:
the omission of the "no" option wasn't because of bias. it was because of forgetfulness. i apologize.

Really, that's one hell of an "oops". :smile:
 
  • #21
jduster said:
the omission of the "no" option wasn't because of bias. it was because of forgetfulness. i apologize.

I thought it might be because Obama said the tax cuts that affected 98.07%* of Americans would not be allowed to expire while he was president, and therefore "no" was not an option.

Poor Barry's got enough PR problems with people making up lhttp://www.snopes.com/politics/obama/50lies.asp" es about him to be doing a Bush Sr. "Read my lips; No new taxes." about-face.

*http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Household_income_in_the_United_States" --> 1.93% of all households had annual incomes exceeding $250,000 (in 2006)
 
Last edited by a moderator:
  • #22
OmCheeto said:
I thought it might be because Obama said the tax cuts that affected 98.07%* of Americans would not be allowed to expire while he was president, and therefore "no" was not an option.
Yeah, "taxing the rich" is just free money, right? They'll just take it out of their personal finances, right? Fat cat cigar fund, maybe?

Rich people's personal finances are the source of revenue for "taxing the rich", right? Seriously?
 
  • #23
Al68 said:
Yeah, "taxing the rich" is just free money, right? They'll just take it out of their personal finances, right? Fat cat cigar fund, maybe?

Rich people's personal finances are the source of revenue for "taxing the rich", right? Seriously?

I'm sorry, but I have not a clue what you are talking about. Are you speaking semantically? Though it looks more like neuvo-cliché-speak to me.

How do you say; "I know nothing" in neuvo-cliché-speak?

It's a hobby of mine. Ya know.
 
  • #24
OmCheeto said:
I'm sorry, but I have not a clue what you are talking about.
It was sarcasm. I was pretending to think that "taxing the rich" takes money from the personal finances of the rich instead of taking money out of investments in the economy.

Poor rich people, they might have to cut down on those fat cat cigars if we raise their taxes. (more sarcasm)
 
  • #25
Al68 said:
It was sarcasm. I was pretending to think that "taxing the rich" takes money from the personal finances of the rich instead of taking money out of investments in the economy.

Poor rich people, they might have to cut down on those fat cat cigars if we raise their taxes. (more sarcasm)

hmmm... Then I guess I am just not understanding the point of your sarcasm.

Do you have a point?

Are you trying to impress upon us, some worldly wisdom with your sarcasm?

If you are, it's gone way over(or more likely, way under) my head.

ps. I've made a preemptive report to the authorities of us about to start fighting on my previous post, so no need to tattle. The dirty deed is done.
 
  • #26
There is an attitude on the right that the people who benefit disproportionately from our economic/financial system should not pay more taxes than the rest of us. I should mention here that I benefited greatly due to hard work and diligence and was myself right on the cusp of that top-2% figure until I found myself unemployed and unemployable due to disability. I never whined and cried about being taxed too heavily. Too many people in my family are just above the poverty-line, and they are hit hard by regressive taxes, like sales taxes and property taxes that are not indexed one's ability to pay.

Bush's tax cuts for the top few percent should not be renewed. They add to our federal deficit while creating no new domestic jobs or new wealth. If you want to stimulate the economy, extend unemployment benefits to the people that HAVE to spend the money they have. That is broad-based, instant stimulation, and it cascades through the local economy, so there is a significant multiplier.
 
  • #27
turbo-1 said:
There is an attitude on the right that the people who benefit disproportionately from our economic/financial system should not pay more taxes than the rest of us.
Baloney. No one has such an "attitude" as that. Can you substantiate that claim at all?
Bush's tax cuts for the top few percent should not be renewed. They add to our federal deficit while creating no new domestic jobs or new wealth.
Raising those taxes will take money out of economic investments, not the "pockets" of rich people or their personal finances. It is the left that is pathologically obsessed with the well being of rich people, not the right. The right only care in the delusional minds of those on the left.
If you want to stimulate the economy, extend unemployment benefits to the people that HAVE to spend the money they have. That is broad-based, instant stimulation, and it cascades through the local economy, so there is a significant multiplier.
Baloney. Wealth distribution doesn't create wealth, it only removes it from economic investments where it is actually used to create wealth, create jobs and material goods and services. It amazes me how many people believe wealth can be created by giving people "dollars".
 
  • #28
Al68 said:
Baloney. No one has such an "attitude" as that. Can you substantiate that claim at all?
Do you ever watch the news? John Boehner claimed before Congress' vacation that we could not afford to extend unemployment benefits for the long-term unemployed because it would add 30+ billion to the deficit. Soon after he claimed that we had to extend the Bush tax cuts for the top 2% despite the fact that it would add about a trillion dollars to the deficit over the next 10 years. You will look in vain for a statement from Boehner that says he doesn't think that the people who benefit disproportionately from our economic/financial systems should pay more in taxes than ordinary folks, but his public statements and official actions are crystal-clear on that point.

Warren Buffet's secretary pays a higher proportion of her income in taxes than Buffet does. Source? Buffet himself.
 
  • #29
turbo-1 said:
You will look in vain for a statement from Boehner that says he doesn't think that the people who benefit disproportionately from our economic/financial systems should pay more in taxes than ordinary folks, but his public statements and official actions are crystal-clear on that point.
Only if grossly misconstrued, as is all too common on the left. Every Republican tax cut in recent history has cut the taxes of "ordinary folks" a greater percentage than the rich, shifting the total tax burden from them to the rich. The facts grossly contradict the propaganda from the left.

The left paints a picture of Republican tax policy that not a single sane person alive could support. And you really think that picture is accurate? The propaganda from the left can only stand in darkness, in the light of the facts, it is exposed as the absurd and hateful lies that they are.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
  • #30
Al68 said:
Only if grossly misconstrued, as is all too common on the left.
Al, that's bull, and you know it. The lower economic classes are hit with regressive taxes that cannot possibly be avoided. The wealthy have a lot of ways around taxes, and are constantly campaigning for more. No "death tax" (as they characterize an inheritance tax) no capital-gains tax, reduced taxes on non-wage incomes (which is practically all the incomes of the wealthiest Americans), etc. It's class-warfare, and the GOP is happily dancing with their handlers on all counts. There are quite a few Democrats willing to throw the working class under the bus, too, so neither party is "clean".
 

Similar threads

  • · Replies 9 ·
Replies
9
Views
2K
  • · Replies 21 ·
Replies
21
Views
3K
  • Poll Poll
  • · Replies 2 ·
Replies
2
Views
2K
  • · Replies 124 ·
5
Replies
124
Views
17K
  • · Replies 41 ·
2
Replies
41
Views
7K
  • · Replies 21 ·
Replies
21
Views
4K
Replies
53
Views
9K
  • Poll Poll
  • · Replies 23 ·
Replies
23
Views
4K
  • Poll Poll
  • · Replies 15 ·
Replies
15
Views
6K
  • · Replies 46 ·
2
Replies
46
Views
5K