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Originally posted by dom
Sorry guys, just to clear up the tax cut thing. Cutting taxes only helps if it revives an economy. For example you currently take �100 in taxes. You cut tax by 10% giving a revenue of �90. Now you're gambling on whether or not that extra �10 leads to growth of 11.1%. If it does then you're back to where you're started, if your country doesn't grow as a result then you've lost 10% of your tax revenues. (using small numbers to make it clearer)
Tell me if I'm wrong with this thinking, but cutting taxes seems like a gamble to me.
As for taxing the poor. The fact that poor people make up such a small percentage of income tax revenue is a good indicator of exactly how big the gap is between rich and poor in the US. The thing is, cutting 1% of tax for poor people, and 2% of tax for rich people seems unfair to me. Is that the way these tax cuts will work? (as I said before, haven't studied them, don't know)
In this country poor people end up paying a higher percentage of their income as tax because their cigarette's cost the same amount as rich people cigarette's, poor people are more likely to smoke, petrol expenditure is a higher percentage of their income because they drive the same distance as rich people. Council tax hits people quite unfairly adding to the inequality. In the end a poor person ends up paying about 20% more tax than a rich person (as a proportion of their wage). And to someone on half the average income, that extra �2000 is worth a lot more than �2000 to a rich guy with an income >�60K.
Anyway, I guess what I'm trying to say is, just because poor people don't earn as much as rich people, that does't justify taxing them more to make up for it (as happens in the UK, and presumably the US). And cutting taxes to generate growth is a gamble, even if the odds are good.
Originally posted by Byrd
Tax cuts won't help. SPENDING cuts would help.
Originally posted by dom
As you say, ways need to be found to pull people up from under-priveleged backgrounds, in this country we used to have assisted places. The school I went to had 50% of it's students on assisted places where the government covered the majority of the cost of sending someone to the school. In fact, it was cheaper for the education system than sending the pupil to one of the local state schools. Anyway, Labour got rid of it, which meant that all of those kids who could have got to the Grammar, now end up at the local comprehensive where they've got far less chance of truly excelling. I never understood why it's the right that like this idea, and the left who hate it...
Originally posted by Leveller
I've noticed that under a government that hits me with more taxes I'm worse off. And because I'm worse off, my employees are worse off. Because they are worse off anyone who they would have spent money with before is worse off.
Originally posted by dom
"Legendary currency speculator and philanthropist George Soros, whose wealth is estimated at $6bn, also dismissed the tax cuts.