One, there's no way Gbaji makes over, oh 75k. He's unskilled labor in the right place at the right time. 75k is about what an auto worker would have made in the 70's when they were in the same situation.
anyway..
By what criteria do you say that federal revenue as a ratio of total GDP is irrelevant? While I would definately agree that where the taxes are coming from, and what they are being spent on is the most important thing, if everything else stays the same, and one year has a 16% revenue rate and the next year has a 20% revenue rate, I think it's clear that the higher rate will impeed future growth simply because the capital and resources that are used each year to generate the next years GDP are being held up at a higher rate in the government.
Not only is it not clear, the opposite has shown to be the case numerous times. Most of the time, actually. GDP includes government spending, by the way, so even a %100 tax rate wouldn't "hold up" resources to generate next years GDP the next years GDP would just be derived wholely from governemt spending. What
criteria do you have to think that taxes relative GDP is of any importnace? What evidence is there that that number alone has any value whatsoever without looking at real GDP and spending?
Quote:
How that rate increased is irrelevant. It's a direct measure of what percentage of your GDP is available to the private sector and what percentage has been taken out by the government. Yes, I'm aware that much of that will come back in one form or another, but the greater the percentage of that money that's moving through the government, the less there is available to the public.
No, the less
percentage there is available to the public. That's a huge and signifigant diffrence. The
percentage avialable to the public isn't relevant tho this discussion, only the
real amount available to the public. Here's a simple example.
I own a house, and a guy in missippi owns a house. My house is about 10 percent of my net worth. His house is about 60 percent of his net worth. Following the logic of the argument you're making here, his house is more valuable because it's worth more of a percentage of his net worth. Clearly, if his net worth is $100 and mine is $1m, I've got the nicer house. It's value relative to another number isn't relevant.
Just like taxes and GDP.
What the exact ratio is there is also irrelevant, it's a mathmatical certainty that if you have a higher ratio of revenue to GDP, you *will* have less avaialable capital to take advantage off business opportunities and whatnot which would otherwise help increase the GDP down the line.
Of course it's not a "mathimatical certainty". It's only a mathimatical certainty if you're talking about IDENTICAL GDP NUMBERS. Which is, of course, ludicrous. Also, once again, government spending increases the GDP. The capital doesn't get taken into the government and vanish.
It doesn't matter where it is particularly. If it's capital gains taxes, then you've just reduced the money that the individual selling some stock could have used to shift into a new investment. If it's inome taxes, you've reduced the disposale income availble (which will clearly reduce future GDP). Same thing with business taxes, and tarrifs. The money has to come from somewhere, and any source will result in a hit to future GDP.
Again, there is simply no evidence that the number you're talking about "hits" future GDP ***AT ALL***. All of the EVIDENCE says either the OPPOSITE is true, or that it's simply not relevant.
You say it's an irrelevant figure. I think it's one of the most important ones. It's a good broad way to see how much the government is taking out of the economy. If the government is taking too much, it will stunt growth.
One, that's certainly arguable. Socualism has never been shown to be an uviable economic system. Never, not once. Finlad's taxes relative to GDP number approaches 50 and they're GDP has done just fine. They have a higher standard of living than we do along with a robust economy and healthcare fo all their citezens and so on. Having a high version of this number has never effected a countries future GDP detrimentally. Every time this theory your espousing has actually been tested, it fails to hold up.
You're also GROSSLY oversimplifying it. Which is why the one tiny portion of the lower taxes argument you're making doesn't make any sense because you're not talking about real GDP or the actual amount of capital available to "be put back into the economy". That's the importnat number to your argument. You mistakenly think it's tied to this other number somkmehow, when of course, it isn't.
I don't see how this is confusing. GRowth is the result of capital used to build new products worht more then the cost of the expenditure (investment). If you take some of the starting capital away, then you *must* reduce growth, in approximately the same rate.
Wrong in so many ways I can't comprehend it. Empirically wrong in that growth during the Clinton years dramatically outpaces growth during the Bush years. A situation which fits identically into the argument you're attempting to make, but with the opposite results. Wrong in a theorhetical sense, because for about the nine thousandth time, GOVERNMENT SPENDING COUNTS.
The only way your argument EVER makes sense is if the government collects taxes and they vanish into thin air. That's the only way you could "take away" capital. You're confusing WHO spends the money with IF it ever gets spent.
Clinton should have been adjusting tax rates to account for the boom of the late 90s. Instead, he just "let it ride", and hoped the economy would take care of itself. He should have seen the rising revenue to GDP rate as a danger sign of an impending crash. The cost of Clinton's surplus was all the businesses that collapsed, and all the people who lost their jobs. How about we ask them if paying off a tiny amount of the national debt was worth it for them?
Fist of all, there's
ZERO EVIDENCE that any of that is even vaguely close to true. You know what dnager sign Clinton headed? A $7,000,000,000,000 debt handed to him by Bush Sr. which
everyone agrees is by far the largest drain on the economy. How much capital is taken out of GDP to service intrest on the debt? If we pay down that debt, we can collect less taxes to provide for the same amount of government spending.
The debt is the huge break on GDP, not taxes. The
ONLY WAY TO EVER PAY DOWN THE DEBT OR STOP IT'S GROWTH IS TO HAVE MORE REVENUE THAN YOU SPEND. Which was what Clinton was trying to do. The only time a President is acting responsibly fiscally is when the revenue number is higher than the spending number. How you accomplish that is where we differ. Well, where we SHOULD differ, anyway.
It's my oppinion that the way to adress the debt, which again, is by far the largest factor taking capital out of the system by anyeone's reckoning, is to have the tax number be higher and the spending number remain constant. What I would want to see is two numbers that looked like 25/20.
It SHOULD be your oppinion that the way to adress the debt is to have BOTH spending and taxes go down. What you SHOULD want to see is numbers that looked like 16/15.
This where your argument comes apart, because you're essentially ignoring the second number. The ratio between the two numbers is why even republicans, even the Heritage guys, have a problem with the current administration's policy.
Everyone has the same problem with it. Not just people on my side of the discussion.
Everyone. If the ratio between those two numbers stays where it is today, the economy collapes eventually. There's no other outcome.
THERE MUST BE A BUDGET SURPLUSS USED TO PAY DOWN THE DEBT AT SOME POINT NO MATTER WHAT.
Otherwise, the amount of taxes we collect is fored to go up asymptotically untill we approach a situation where 100% of the revenue coming in goes to service the debt.
THAT is what will cripple the GDP long term.
Speaking of unemployment. Why do you keep switching the issue around? So what if we've got fewer jobs today then we had 4 years ago? We have more then we had 2 years ago. That tells us that sometime between 4 years ago and today, we had a recession that increased the unemployment rate, but that we've been in recovery from it for the last 2 years. In other words, Bush turned a recession around in less then two years. How is that a bad reflection of his economic policies?
Because he caused it in the first place. Again, if I burn your house down and then rebuild you a smaller house worth less, It's not a positive outcome.
We can argue all day over whether Clinton is at fault for the crash in 2001, and resulting recession. However, we can state with absolute certainty that Bush turned that recession around in record time.
We can? Untill we reach economic numbers that meet where we were before the downturn noting's been turned around. It's great that the numbers are going up. It's not great that they're still far, far below where they were when Bush took office.
Too little, too late.
I just don't see that as a negative thing. Unless you can come up with any way that a president who takes office in Jan of 2001, and begins to make economic policy starting at that point, but must wait until Jan 2002 to begin to see those changes take effect can possibly be at fault for a receission that clearly started in mid 2001. The crash was in full swing a good half year before a single policy change he enacted took effect. Heck, depending on what you are looiking at, there's some evidence that the economy was starting to crash in 2000 *before* he even took office!
There's no evidence Clinton had anything to do with it. There's a bunch of theories with data only selected that meets the theories. No one who seriously looks at the issue tries to blame Clinton with a straight face.
Look, there's the far more likely theory that other factors caused the downturn and that it had little to do with either man. Regardless, Bush should have taken action to create jobs DIRECTLY THROUGH GOVERNMENT SPENDING if that was his goal to fix the unemployment problem.
He didn't, he chose to let the private sector spend the money in any way they chose, and they chose to invest a good deal of it elsewhere and to continue to cut jobs to increase profits for shareholders.
Great, profits help the GDP, but re-allocating income from uneployed people to investors isn't a long term goal I'm in favor of.
Your oippinion my differ.
Oh. The supply side theory you are talking about is an "ideal". I don't think anyone other then theorists think you can run an economy without making adjustments to taxes and spending along the way. They key concept is that by taxing less (interestingly enough, they are *also* talking about total revenue in relation to GDP when theyt say "taxing less", but whatever...), you spur on GDP growth of the correct sectors, thus allowing you to collect the same "total" amount of revenue while keeping that amount lower in relation to GDP (again! Why do you think it's irrelevant?).
Thanks for regurgitating what I just taught you. You're still missing the point, though. You have to SPEND LESS for the increased total amount of revenue caused by the growth in GDP to be of any value.
There is *nothing* about that relationship that has anything to do with spending.
/em Holds his sides laughing. There isn't??
Source me please, I need to see this theory that ignores government spending and says that you can spend wildly so long as you cut revenue.
The increase in total revenue is based on the assumption (as I stated above) that the bigger the amount of the pie you allow to remain in the hands of the "public", the greaer your GDP growth over time will be. Obviously, you want to ideally keep spending down to allow for that initial reduced revenue. But a deficit doesn't hurt this model any more then any other. It's money that's owed either way. Honestly, I'd rather we borrow 100B while reducing taxes, then borrow 100B while keeping them the same.
Obviously, if you can reduce that revenue rate without borrowing money that would be ideal, in exactly the same way that if you could buy a car without having to take out a loan, that would be better, but taking out that loan has no effect on the value of the car in 3 years (bad example I know since cars are a bad investment, but you get the point I hope).
Taking out a loan has an effect on the value of the car RELATIVE TO HOW MUCH YOU PAID FOR IT.
There is INTREST on the debt, you know. That's the whole problem.
This unimportnat debt intrest came to $318,148,529,151.51 in 2003. 318 BILLION. That's ~25% of revenue.
So what you're advoating with your Car theory would go as follows:
If you make $100,000 a year, it's no big deal if you buy a car where the INTREST ONLY WITHOUT PRINCIPLE PAYMENTS AT ALL is $25,000 a year.
Sound like a good idea?
But the act of running a deficit in no way affects the basic Supply Side economic model. The expected growth of GDP will occur whether we owe money on the debt or not. They're just not connected in any direct way.
You don't understand it.
I hate to burden you with that particular albatross again, but you don't.
Running a deficit effects ANY economic model. It HAS to. If it didn't, ANY ECONOMIC MODEL WOULD COLLAPSE BECAUSE THE COUNTRY WOULD SIMPLY GO BANKRUPT AT SOME POINT.
Get it? If you run a defectit FOREVER, you go bankrupt. That's the way it works.
Supply side theory says that by lowering taxes and keeping spending the same, GDP goes up and causes a SURPLUS.
NO ONE ADVOCATES CUTTING TAXE
AND INCREASING SPENDING.
No one, but you. You're an economic theory island, my freind. Let's call it the
Irresponsible Gbaji Theory. I summurize in abstract as follows:
Cutting taxes is always good, in a absolute sense, as spending is irrelevant and deficts don't matter at all. An ideal solution would be to just stop collecting taxes alltogther and just borrow money to run the government. This will be good for GDP growth long term.
Which would be arguing against Supply Side theory and in favor of IGT (Irresponsible Gbaji Theory)
Here's your whole problem. You have vauge understanding of one small portion of economic theory, and really only sort of at that, as it pertains to GDP growth.
Now if GDP growth existed in a vaccum, we could just eliminate taxes alltogether, spend as much as we wanted and there would be no consequences to the aconomy down the road. It doesn't, though.
If you ask a supply side theorist or practician how to spur growth they will answer:
Cut taxes.
If you ask them how we deal with the national debt they will answer:
Cut spending.
You ignore that second question for whatever bizarre reason.