THORNHEART wrote:Reagan kinda saw things more realistically.
Wait...which Reagan are you talking about? Surely you don't mean the 40th president of the USA, right?
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THORNHEART wrote:Reagan kinda saw things more realistically.
stahrgazer wrote:Small businesses get to keep the tax incentives, and he's working to give them more incentives, like the gov't paying 100% for a short while, for single parents and the elderly to get employment... the businesses that hire them are getting their full salary reimbursed. It's true, I know a few ppl who've gotten work that way in recent weeks.
Snorri1234 wrote:Trickle-down economics is bullshit.
bedub1 wrote:Snorri1234 wrote:Trickle-down economics is bullshit.
This is incorrect. Trickle-down economics is nothing more than a complete understanding of the flow of money.
max is gr8 wrote:Night Strike wrote:No wonder why you don't live in the real world. A poor economy already means that most businesses aren't doing well. Adding more taxes on the businesses cuts off even more of their profits, which means they have to start cutting costs (jobs) to stay afloat. Adding more taxes to individuals mean even less money for the people to spend on goods and services, so the economy stays poor.
Which is why some countries run their corporate tax on profits only. So there's no reason to cut jobs.
Snorri1234 wrote:Raising taxes on the very rich really isn't bad for the economy. Money needs to be circulated, and if you're rich a lot of your money doesn't circulate enough.
Honestly, the only way you can be against taxes on rich people during poor times is if you believe the government simply burns the money they get.
bedub1 wrote:Snorri1234 wrote:Raising taxes on the very rich really isn't bad for the economy. Money needs to be circulated, and if you're rich a lot of your money doesn't circulate enough.
Honestly, the only way you can be against taxes on rich people during poor times is if you believe the government simply burns the money they get.
Honestly, the only way you can be for taxes on rich people during any times is if you believe the rich people simply bury their money and don't circulate it.
Mr_Adams wrote:You, sir, are an idiot.
Timminz wrote:By that logic, you eat babies.
spurgistan wrote:Explain how the fact that the share of capital held by the richest 1%, 5%, and 10% of the population has risen dramatically and constantly over the last 30 years if the gloriously wealthy have been successfully circulating their money.
Doc_Brown wrote:spurgistan wrote:Explain how the fact that the share of capital held by the richest 1%, 5%, and 10% of the population has risen dramatically and constantly over the last 30 years if the gloriously wealthy have been successfully circulating their money.
That's easy to explain. First, for the most part, people are going to use the largest part of their money in a way that either brings them more money of gives them some added value. Someone that brings home $1million per year isn't just going to decide he only uses $100K to live on and therefore donate the other $900K to charities of various sorts. He may will give $100K-200K away to charities, but he'll likely invest $500K and use the other $200K for enjoyment/causes/etc...
Setting that aside, let's take two hypothetical people. One makes $50K per year and the other makes $450K per year (after taxes in both cases to make this easier). If he's lucky the $50K guy can invest somewhere around $5K per year. Assuming he puts his contributions in monthly and averages about 10% returns per year, he'll have about $90K invested after 10 years for a total wealth accumulation of $540K (wages plus investment income).
They guy making $450K can realistically live on $250K (even with an extravagant lifestyle) and invest $200K per year. Using the same investment strategy as the $50K guy, he'll have $3.4M invested after 10 years, for a total accumulation of $5.9M. Which means that even though the $50K guy was earning 10% of the total, he ended up with 8.4% of the total wealth accumulation. Or, if you take living expenses out, he ends up with 1.5% of the total available funds after 10 years.
It gets worse when you realize that the $450K guy isn't necessarily just going to invest in 10% growth mutual funds. He has the cash to buy chunks of real estate, build businesses, and pay high-performing brokers to get him a return much higher than 10%. On the other hand, he's pumping nearly half his income into business ventures, which will be used to hire more people, acquire capital equipment, and generally support the economy.
What happens if you try to set up penalties so that he is unable to end up with more than 90% of the total after 10 years? That's accomplished by investing only $45K per year and following the same strategy as the guy that invests $5K per year. The other $155K he'll try to hide using whatever loophole he can. It will either be in terms of buying items that have intrinsic value (especially if it appreciates over times - say real estate or precious metals) or by sending it overseas into some venture that will allow him to get his higher rate of return in the long run. What you get is a lot less money pumped directly into the economy.
That top 1% also pay something like 95% of all taxes (a significantly larger share of the taxes than their share of the total wealth). It's simply that because they have more available funds, they can access better wealth-building tools than the lower income earners. Maybe it's not "fair," but there's no way to legislate or enforce "fairness" since the very idea has no objective standard. It's also not fair that someone else is smarter, prettier, stronger, has better parents, or has any other advantage that you or I don't!

72o wrote:I mean, it was already said, earlier in the thread, that the only way to save a crippled economy is for the government to spend money. I mean, it's not like they burn it, right?
Snorri1234 wrote:Well....some people obviously think they do. Otherwise you'd have to come down on the government being better at putting money in the economy for the basic fact they don't save. People save. Rich people don't put all of their money into the economy. The government has no problem with spending all of their money.
So if money spend no matter what means "better economy" then obviously the solution is to give more money to the government.
Snorri1234 wrote:72o wrote:I mean, it was already said, earlier in the thread, that the only way to save a crippled economy is for the government to spend money. I mean, it's not like they burn it, right?
Well....some people obviously think they do. Otherwise you'd have to come down on the government being better at putting money in the economy for the basic fact they don't save. People save. Rich people don't put all of their money into the economy. The government has no problem with spending all of their money.
So if money spend no matter what means "better economy" then obviously the solution is to give more money to the government.
thegreekdog wrote:Snorri1234 wrote:72o wrote:I mean, it was already said, earlier in the thread, that the only way to save a crippled economy is for the government to spend money. I mean, it's not like they burn it, right?
Well....some people obviously think they do. Otherwise you'd have to come down on the government being better at putting money in the economy for the basic fact they don't save. People save. Rich people don't put all of their money into the economy. The government has no problem with spending all of their money.
So if money spend no matter what means "better economy" then obviously the solution is to give more money to the government.
I think what the good Doc Brown is saying is that "saving" money means that the money is put back into the economy.
According to the White House (I used this to avoid bias complaints... I've seen higher estimates elsewhere), $92,000 of government spending creates one job-year. In other words, for every $92,000 the government spends, one job is created for one year. My question and my issue with the American Recovery Act is whether that $92,000 would be put to better use in the hands of a private company that might be able to create more jobs with that $92,000.
Phatscotty wrote:you could also look at it from a production perspective. how productive is the gov't job, how productive is the private sector job. May I also point out that the 92K cost for the job only pay 40-60K for the salary, and you probably also have to add on the expense of building the new, state of the art facility with a skate-board park and a doggy trail
Snorri1234 wrote:Man, you managed to make greek's argument less good.
thegreekdog wrote:Snorri1234 wrote:Man, you managed to make greek's argument less good.
What's the definition of futility? thegreekdog?
I need some more conservative voices of reason... like Doc Brown (although his stuff is too dense for me... and I do tax planning).
Snorri1234 wrote:thegreekdog wrote:Snorri1234 wrote:Man, you managed to make greek's argument less good.
What's the definition of futility? thegreekdog?
I need some more conservative voices of reason... like Doc Brown (although his stuff is too dense for me... and I do tax planning).
I'm actually reading Doc Brown's and your posts. What is good about it is that I can't simply take apart your posts because they're dumb, because they aren't. They have reason and I'm just trying to find some facts and counter-arguments I had somewhere but that's compromised because I'm also busy watching Serenity.
Might take a day.
72o wrote:The fact that Megan Fox is hot as f*ck, and makes millions of dollars a year by simply being hot as f*ck, is unfair.