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The Staggering Legacy of Tax Cuts

Date: September 14, 2004 | 29 Rajab 1425 Hijriah
Subjects: politics

From an article1:

If George Bush was running for re-election on the basis of his stewardship of the US economy alone, he would already be packing his bags.

To be blunt, the economy's performance has been dismal by recent standards. Some of that grimness has not been Bush's fault — he took office in the backwash of a calamitous financial bubble, the effects of which made the economic impact of 9/11 look like a hiccup.

But little that the Bush team has done since has been effective or sensible in policy terms. The debate inside the White House appears to have been limited in the extreme, provoking Bush's original choice as treasury secretary, Paul O'Neill, to describe the president as "like a blind man in a roomful of deaf people." The administration's measures have been less "it's the economy, stupid," and more "the stupid economy."

Even if we excuse Bush the after-shocks of the dotcom meltdown and the disruption of 9/11, his record remains poor.

His default mode of economic stimulus has been tax cuts for the wealthy, which Republican apologists shrilly declared to be engines of job creation. That has proved to be incorrect.
(link)

I hope that the Democrats at least practice fiscal sanity. The Republicans sure don't.

Complete text of the article, The Staggering Legacy of Tax Cuts, by the Editors of the Guardian

If George Bush was running for re-election on the basis of his stewardship of the US economy alone, he would already be packing his bags.

To be blunt, the economy's performance has been dismal by recent standards. Some of that grimness has not been Bush's fault — he took office in the backwash of a calamitous financial bubble, the effects of which made the economic impact of 9/11 look like a hiccup.

But little that the Bush team has done since has been effective or sensible in policy terms. The debate inside the White House appears to have been limited in the extreme, provoking Bush's original choice as treasury secretary, Paul O'Neill, to describe the president as "like a blind man in a roomful of deaf people." The administration's measures have been less "it's the economy, stupid," and more "the stupid economy."

Even if we excuse Bush the after-shocks of the dotcom meltdown and the disruption of 9/11, his record remains poor.

His default mode of economic stimulus has been tax cuts for the wealthy, which Republican apologists shrilly declared to be engines of job creation. That has proved to be incorrect.

Only a few months ago — February, in fact — the White House was predicting job growth of more than 300,000 a month.

The reality has been less than half that, or 1.7 million fewer jobs than the administration forecast just seven months ago. That means the labour market is standing still, with job creation barely keeping pace with U.S. population growth.

So, if no job growth, the legacy of the Bush tax cuts has instead been a ballooning deficit thanks to the tax cuts. The projections are staggering. The Congressional Budget Office forecasts a $2,000 billion deficit between now and 2009, including a $400 billion shortfall this year.

Given that Bush came into office with a budget surplus, the figures are extraordinary: America's economy has been mortgaged for its wealthiest citizens.

Bush addressed little of this during the Republican convention, instead mentioning vague and nebulous plans to encourage "ownership." As the Los Angeles Times observed, his speech "would have been more convincing if he had not actually been president for the last four years."

His opponent, John Kerry, has not been much more forthcoming, but is at least concerned about the dangers of the deficit.

Many of Kerry's economic advisers cut their teeth in the Clinton administration, and offer the prospect of competence and wisdom — something sorely missed in Bush's White House.

reference=http://www.commondreams.org/views04/0914-08.htm
~ Posted by Al-Muhajabah, a fair and balanced niqabi, at 02:50 PM

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