It's all good now. Whether 83% of the cuts going to the top 1% can be argued if it's good or not but in general I agree less taxes are good.
I'll wait until next year when the talks of 'entitlement reform' get more detailed to judge if it's better for the long term.
Nancy Pelosi said this was the worst bill in the history of the United States. That it's Armageddon.
Lol.
Apparently Armageddon means:
80% of Americans keeping more of their money
Higher wages announced by several major corporations
Bonuses announced by several major corporations
In nearly every possible family example, they kept more of their money. For instance a single father of 2 kids making 60k had his tax burden reduced by like 30%.
Armageddon folks. This is what Armageddon looks like.
The last two times Republicans cut taxes, it resulted in growth for the economy.
If Democrats are so certain it won't happen this time, why not wait to see if they will be proven right? Then we can all move on from this silly idea that tax cuts actually help the economy.
It would depend on future changes to the law, automatic stabilizers, Federal Reserve action, market forces, etc.
At the moment, the deficit is estimated to be $666 billion for FY 2017 so it would probably be in the $1T ballpark if Democrats and Republicans get the additional stuff they want to get the US economy back on the right track.
In any event, it's a shame the GOP dropped the ball on tax reform because they lacked ambition.
Americans have a strange obsession with "money in your pocket".
Having a extra $1000 in your pocket a year seems like a strange exchange for giving tax breaks that provide less money to fund your government that could then give you proper services such as actual universal health care, maternity/paternity leave, unemployment benefits, more affordable education, etc.
From the outside looking in Americans seem very focused on ones self rather than the health of the nation as a whole.
It's all good now. Whether 83% of the cuts going to the top 1% can be argued if it's good or not but in general I agree less taxes are good.
This is not actually true. More taxes on the rich would be a good thing right now as those tax dollars could be used to invest in the parts of the country that actually makes the economy work and thus improve everybody's lives while, funnily enough, not hurting the rich at all.
Nancy Pelosi said this was the worst bill in the history of the United States. That it's Armageddon.
Lol.
Apparently Armageddon means:
80% of Americans keeping more of their money
Higher wages announced by several major corporations
Bonuses announced by several major corporations
In nearly every possible family example, they kept more of their money. For instance a single father of 2 kids making 60k had his tax burden reduced by like 30%.
Armageddon folks. This is what Armageddon looks like.
Sàmban;253133761 said:Come on man. I know you want to "own dem libruls" but don't you think it seems absurd to claim that 80% of Americans will be keeping more of their money when that amounts to about $1K to $2k for most while the costs of everything else being cut (education, healthcare, etc) actually means they are losing money? For example you keep an extra $2K and you get a $1K bonus or whatnot, but your insurance/healthcare costs go up because of too many people using ERs since they can't afford insurance (just one simple example of many). I hope you can see that, even if you are only looking out for yourself, it seems pretty shortsighted to think like that because everyone gets fucked in the end (except for corporations). The bonuses you are talking about are nothing but a PR move that could have been done at anytime considering record corporation profits vs stagnant wages. They are not a direct result of these cuts. I mean, this is pretty obvious stuff.
You can't just recite liberal talking points.
Did the cost of eduction or healthcare decrease from 2008-2016 when we were paying more taxes?
No?
You can't just recite liberal talking points.
Did the cost of eduction or healthcare decrease from 2008-2016 when we were paying more taxes?
No?
Well by your logic they should have.
It's a PR disaster for democrats. It's not just 8 of 10 getting a tax cut. With all these companies announcing pay increases and bonuses and billions being reinvested in USA business and not overseas, and not a single democrat voted for it. It probably is Armageddon just for different reasons.
It is more than that for me. Around $1500. Any amount the government doesn't take from the money I worked for is a good thing.
Hey look AT&T is giving 200,000 employees a $1,000 bonus because of the tax cut. I am sure you guys can find something negative about that too.
Trumps America. We werent like this 4 years ago 8 years ago or even 12 years ago.
Nobody cares about the deficit now that Republicans are in charge.
And in a few years, individual tax breaks expire and the middle class has it's taxes raised. Sweet tax bill, Trump.
This is silly. Have you just started following politics? One side always complains about the other. MAGA is an empty cliche, and this tax cut does nothing but enlarge the wealth gap; which is revolution-size at this point.
And by the looks of your subsequent post, you've discovered what "effective tax rate" means. Your solution of abolishing the corporate tax is ludicrous. It's like building an infrastructure with public money then handing it over to private companies to rape the consumer with fees. You're delusional if you think most corps will not sacrifice fairness and long-term stability for short-term gain.
Beardsley Ruml said:The federal tax on corporate profits is the tax which is most important in its effect on business operations. There are other taxes which are of great concern to special classes of business. There are many problems of state and local taxation of business which become extremely urgent, particularly when a corporation has no profits at all.
However, we shall confine our discussion to the federal corporation income tax, since it is in this way that business is principally taxed. We shall also confine our considerations to the problems of ordinary peacetime taxation since, during wartime, many tax measures, such as the excess-profits tax, have a special justification.
Taxes on corporation profits have three principal consequences --- all of them bad.
Briefly, the three bad effects of the corporation income tax are:
1. The money which is taken from the corporation in taxes must come in one of three ways. It must come from the people, in the higher prices they pay for the things they buy; from the corporation's own employees in wages that are lower than they otherwise would be; or from the corporation's stockholders, in lower rate of return on their investment. No matter from which sources it comes, or in what proportion, this tax is harmful to production, to purchasing power, and to investment.
2. The tax on corporation profits is a distorting factor in managerial judgment, a factor which is prejudicial to clear engineering and economic analysis of what will be best for the production and distribution of things for use. And, the larger the tax, the greater the distortion.
3. The corporation income tax is the cause of double taxation. The individual taxpayer is taxed once when his profit is earned by the corporation, and once again when he receives the profit as a dividend. This double taxation makes it more difficult to get people to invest their savings in business than if the profits of business were only taxed once. Furthermore, stockholders with small incomes bear as heavy a burden under the corporation income tax as do stockholders with large incomes.
Isn't this like the third time you've guys (as in your country in general) have tried this tax approach?
True. Because not a single democrat would support this bill. They couldn't stand to give a single dollar back to a tax payer. This is the reason for the expiration of the tax cuts. I'm all for criticism, but give it where it's due. This aspect was 100% due to the Democrats. Not a single democrat member of Congress would allow a reduction in taxes to Americans forcing it to a majority vote which restricted making the tax cuts permanent.
I don't understand how the Democrats forced the Republicans (who wrote the bill) to exclude making the tax cuts on the middle class permanent. No Democrat in the Senate or Congress voted for the bill and the Republicans got it through.
If they wanted to include it in the bill they would have done so and passed it easily. But lets face it.. they made it temporary to shift the burden on the middle class. next year they're going to cut social programs to afford it.
Democrats didn't force anything, the bill needed to follow to Byrd rule to get enough votes from its own party, thus they are temporary. The Democrats had no impact other than trying to lobby against little details like axing the student loan interests deduction.
And small businesses get ate up by taxes.
The effective tax rate in the U.S. is lower than 21 percent due to tax loopholes. And since thdy basically cut a LOT of things out there will be instances when a small business taxes will be more than ATT. There will also be instances where the ceo effective tax rate is less than his secretary.This is what I've heard too. I work at a relatively small company (~60ish employees) and from what I understand from our controller is that this is really no benefit with a potential to be worse for us.
I'm also under the impression that the corporate tax cuts won't really do anything because we still don't compete with other countries, where corporations can get close to 0% tax
I'm no expert tho and probably misinformed on a lot.
If the democrats wanted to support a tax cut bill they could have done it and voted to make it permanent. They did not support this bill at all. Not a single vote. That did, by definition, force the Byrd rule to apply. It was that or no tax cuts (which is what the democrats were pushing for).