Studies at the L.A. Times show that putting the words Ronald Reagan in the title increase readership significantly regardless of the lack of a connection demonstrated in the text.
a) Reagan lowered the top rate from 70% to 28%. What similar proposal does Buffet have for our time?
b) The 'payroll tax' is code for your social security (insurance) account, and Medicare. Premiums are capped because benefits are capped. Does Buffet accept then that if one person pays in 100 times more each year than the cap today his 'benefits' would also grow to be 100 times higher. If not, it becomes a generic, means tested, on-budget welfare program (as it should be) ready for the chopping block. Sure tax it all the way up, but then slash the payouts and reduce the tax rate to something that won't kill off investment, production and employment any further, maybe 3% across the board instead of 15.3%, and more than offset by larger cuts simultaneously in the other reforms. Reagan didn't show any interest in restructuring social security in spite of the false editorial title.
c) "...lowering the tax burden for wealthy people who make money through investments rather than labor"
Dividends are earned with after-tax investment capital and are already quadruple taxed. To simplify that is to deceive. How can a corp pay out dividends on earnings without first declaring earnings and pay a federal and state corporate tax on that, plus the next 15%. So what he calls 15% is, in our state, 35% + 10% + 15% +8% = 68% combined quadruple tax on the return on investment dollars. that were already taxed as ordinary income. Want to go higher and see if the economy grows?? You are better off in Communist China, and that's where much of those investment dollars went.
Long term capital gains are also being taxed at the state level as ORDINARY INCOME. 15% is bullshit because you are taxed on the nominal gain when by definition (long term) it includes a significant inflationary component. Why does a smart man like that need to deceive and inflame class warfare in order to make a cheap, political point? Because the point on its merits falls on its face.
d) Missing in the broken logic string is that after Reagan, under a Democratic President, we lowered the capital gains rate and the economy boomed, revenues surges and the budget balanced. A move in the opposite direction is based on class envy, not revenue collections. That the lower incomes are being punished is BS under the same logic. The lower half of workers pay zero in federal income tax and they are the ones who cling to the broken social security Ponzi scheme and will rely the heaviest on Medicare. The absence of honesty is glaring.
e) News to L.A.Time editorialists: We no longer compete in a 1980s global economy. Republicans have tried to drop all the obsession with Reagan and his policies and circumstances from 30 years ago. People who opposed his policies might consider the same.
f) "After the billionaire chairman of investment firm Berkshire Hathaway wrote an op-ed in the New York Times complaining that the mega-rich are undertaxed in comparison to the middle class, conservatives urged him to voluntarily send more of his own money to the Internal Revenue Service"
Did he? I think not. He still wants someone else to pay. BTW, it is conservatives who want to reform the code. What reform other than tax rate increases on job creators has the LA Times supported? Just curious.
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Arthur Laffer just might understand Reagan's thinking a little better than the leftists who opposed him at every turn. Laffer suggests:
Obama Must Use Reaganomics to Save Economy, Wednesday, 10 Aug 2011
The only way President Barack Obama can solve the nation’s economic woes is to adopt “common-sense” Reaganomics, the policy’s architect Arthur Laffer claims in an exclusive Newsmax interview.
Laffer said the White House called him in the spring and asked him to speak to Obama’s former Council of Economic Advisors’ chairman Austen Goolsbee – and he had told him exactly the same thing.
“Reaganomics would fix any economy that’s in the doldrums,” Laffer said. “It’s not a magic sauce, it’s common sense.
“You’ve got to get rid of all federal taxes in the extreme and replace them with a low-rate flat tax on business net sales, and on personal unadjusted gross income. That’s number one.
“Number two, you have to have spending restraint. Government spending causes unemployment, it does not cure unemployment.
“Number three, you need sound money. Ben Bernanke is running the least sound monetary policy I’ve ever heard of," Laffer said.
“Number four you need regulations, but you don’t need those regulations to go beyond the purpose at hand and create collateral damage. The regulatory policies are really way off here.
“And lastly you need free trade," Laffer said. "Foreigners produce some things better than we do and we produce some things better than foreigners. It would be foolish in the extreme if we didn’t sell them those things we produce better than they do in exchange for those things they produce better than we do.”
In the interview the veteran economist said Standard & Poor’s was quite right in downgrading the U.S. credit rating – in fact it should have done so far earlier.
The agency had no choice and if the other agencies, Moody’s and Fitch, don’t do the same they won’t be doing their jobs, said Laffer, who gave his name to the Laffer Curve which demonstrates that the maximum amount of government revenue does not come at the point of maximum taxes.
“If you had a company that had revenues of $2½ million and expenses of $4 million, with no change in sight, $1½ million in losses each year as far as the eye can see and it had already borrowed $10 million, what would you rate that company? I surely wouldn’t rate it AAA.
“That is the U.S. situation today," Laffer said. "Taxes are about $2½ trillion, government spending is about $4 trillion and we have about $10 trillion in net national debt. I don’t see that as being a AAA country.
“If the S&P and the others were doing their jobs correctly, they should have downgraded a long time ago.”
Laffer said he has no doubt the country will win its top rating back, but only when economic policies are completely turned around. He said President Barack Obama’s administration’s only economic plan seemed to be to expand government ownership of the means of production.
“They have nationalized the health care industry pretty extensively. They’ve done that with home building as well. They’ve tried it with the auto industry as well. So they have moved very, very deliberatively and purposefully toward extending the government ownership of the means of production.
“That to me, if you read the tealeaves, is what they are doing. It is not what they are saying they are doing, but that is what they actually are doing.
“People don’t work to pay taxes, people work to get what they can after taxes. It’s that very private incentive that motivates them to work. If you pay people not to work and tax them if they do work, don’t be surprised if you find a lot of people not working.”
Laffer said the current economic woes started to form under President George W. Bush but have been made worse by Obama’s policies.
“There’s a wedge driven between wages paid and wages received and that wedge is the tax/government spending wedge,” he said.
“That wedge has grown dramatically in the last 4 ½ years…under W and a Republican administration and…under Obama. Bipartisan ignorance has led us to this very disastrously desolate state.”
http://www.newsmax.com/Headline/laffer-obama-reaganomics-gop/2011/08/10/id/406893?s=al&promo_code=CCF6-1