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3 Lies Republicans Tell to Defend Not Raising Taxes on the Wealthy
The political consensus may be shifting on raising taxes on the wealthy, but many Republicans keep sticking to these falsehoods in order to oppose a tax hike for the rich.
1). Raising taxes on the wealthy will hurt economic growth and the job creators.
In October, Speaker of the House John Boehner wrote, “As a former small businessman, my experience has taught me that raising taxes on families and small businesses will only hurt job creation. We need to be encouraging the private-sector to grow; raising their taxes will only discourage job creation, innovation, and entrepreneurship.”
This is a myth spun more out of belief, than history and fact. Republicans love to bring up how Ronald Reagan lowered taxes and the economy grew, but this isn’t the whole truth. Ronald Reagan did lower taxes in 1981, but he wiped out that tax cut by raising taxes in 1982 and 1983. Reagan also raised taxes in 1984 and 1986. The economy actually dipped after the 1981 tax cut, and returned to normal growth after taxes were increased.
A direct comparison of the Bush tax cut with Clinton tax increase shows the difference in economic growth. According to the Center for American Progress, “Overall economic growth was much slower under the Bush administration’s tax policies than under the Clinton administration’s tax policies. Real gross domestic product grew by 26 percent in the six years after Clinton’s tax increases. But real GDP grew by just 16 percent in the six years after the Bush tax cuts began. In fact, that six-year growth rate was low even by general historical standards. The average real GDP growth in any given six year period (from any quarter to the same quarter six years later) since World War II was 22 percent.”
The historical data shows that increasing taxes a little bit on those at the top helps real small business owners and middle class individuals. The blunt truth is that Republicans don’t have a single example using non-partisan data of federal tax cuts growing the economy, so they cling to their belief even harder and tell America that this time they know the tax cuts will work.
2). Income over $250,000 isn’t rich/Obama’s tax hike will hurt the middle class.
This is a more interesting discussion, but Republicans base their premise on belief instead of actual numbers. According to the Census Bureau, the median income in the US is $50, 054. The Tax Policy Center ran the numbers and found that, “About 6.07 million Americans earned above $200,000 in 2011. They make up the top 4.2 percent of taxpayers. But their income, an estimated $3.5 trillion, represents 32.5 percent of all the cash income earned.” (It is interesting to note that among those making $1 million or more a year, 42% of their income comes from capital gains. Also, these people are so opposed to Obamacare because they are going to be hit hard by the 3.8% Obamacare surcharge on unearned income over $250,000.) PolitiFact reviewed IRS statistics and found that 98.2% of tax filers had an adjusted gross income less than $250,000 per year. It is important to note that the tax increase will apply not to gross income, but adjusted gross income.
This discussion is interesting because for people who live in more expensive parts of the country, $250,000 isn’t as much as it is for those who live elsewhere. Those who make $250,000 could be considered middle class in New York or LA compared to being better off at the same income level in Cleveland, Detroit, or Pittsburgh.
Overall, the idea that a small tax hike on about 2 million taxpayers will somehow shatter the economy becomes laughable the numbers are reviewed. (This is why Republicans avoid at all costs basing their tax arguments on accurate data.)
3). Cutting taxes for the rich benefits everyone.
Republicans have been using the Laffer Curve to argue for trickle down economics for decades, but with with the repeated failure of trickle down, conservatives have been forced to stop using the term while still advocating the principles behind trickle down economics. All through the 2012 campaign the Romney/Ryan ticket argued, based on trickle down principles, that a massive tax cut for the wealthy could fix the economy and benefit us all.
A recent study by the non-partisan Congressional Research Service found that tax cuts for the rich don’t grow they economy, but they do increase income inequality, “The results of the analysis suggest that changes over the past 65 years in the top marginal tax rate and the top capital gains tax rate do not appear correlated with economic growth. The reduction in the top tax rates appears to be uncorrelated with saving, investment, and productivity growth. The top tax rates appear to have little or no relation to the size of the economic pie. However, the top tax rate reductions appear to be associated with the increasing concentration of income at the top of the income distribution. As measured by IRS data, the share of income accruing to the top 0.1% of U.S. families increased from 4.2% in 1945 to 12.3% by 2007 before falling to 9.2% due to the 2007-2009 recession. At the same time, the average tax rate paid by the top 0.1% fell from over 50% in 1945 to about 25% in 2009. Tax policy could have a relation to how the economic pie is sliced—lower top tax rates may be associated with greater income disparities.”
Keep these points in mind as you listen to Republicans discuss the fiscal cliff and raising taxes on the wealthy. Most of the Republican argument for not raising taxes on the rich, just isn’t true.
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Elizabeth
Nov. 24th, 2012 at 1:23 pm
” PolitiFact reviewed IRS statistics and found that 98.2% of tax filers had an adjusted gross income greater than $250,000 per year.” I think that should be “less than”.
Jason Easley
Nov. 24th, 2012 at 1:58 pm
Thanks. You are correct. I am blaming a turkey hangover. :)
James Threadgill
Nov. 24th, 2012 at 1:49 pm
Historical income share data and the lessons of the Great Depression demonstrate cutting taxes on the top one percent and the inequality this creates leads not to job creation but to economic disaster and discontent.
regressivewatch.org/wordp...
Anne
Nov. 24th, 2012 at 2:34 pm
Republicans are famous for doubling down on lies that are easily discredited or for doubling down on defense of policies that have been proven to have the opposite effect of what Republicans claim they do, namely the trickle down theory. They insult the intelligence of rational, thinking Americans, especially those who’ve observed the destructive results of their policies over the years. Unfortunately, they have among the “47%” the kind of mouthpieces who have never benefitted from their policies and never will. Just the same, these parrots defend the GOP vigorously, probably in the vain hope that one day, they’ll be among the 1%.
zelduh
Nov. 24th, 2012 at 4:05 pm
After the tax rate increases for those “small businesses” (like Exxon) making more than $250K, expect the unemployment rate to go down. (Payroll is tax-deductible.)
Sugapea
Nov. 24th, 2012 at 4:26 pm
We need to ‘enlighten’ people. When you read posts saying ‘Tax Rates are way too high’…Just post the following Chart. Notice the years when we could afford new highways, bridges & schools:
i158.photobucket.com/albu...
While Romney and his buddies are now only paying 15% and they still cry, “Taxes are too high”.
Here’s an interesting piece that breaks down the ‘US Tax Rate History’ from ‘Business Insider’: www.businessinsider.com/h...
David Isler
Nov. 24th, 2012 at 4:57 pm
To republicans repetition is truth, but outside the bubble it ain’t necessarily so. The trouble is how well it works. I wonder how well the truth could be imprinted. The R’s declared class war decades ago, albeit secretly until Rove decided it was time to accuse D’s of it. As usual the D’s sensitivity made them fall for the accusations. GOP strategy consistently Trumps dim Dems acting as if the truth mattered. That’s an unhealthy habit borne of self doubt, something you never hear from R’s. We need to replace that doubt with strength of conviction, not by saying so loudly and often, but b/c what we say makes so much sense we can’t help but to act on it.
robbiez54
Nov. 24th, 2012 at 7:53 pm
I pretty much lean towards the dem’s but both partys piss me off. the R’s for telling lies on top of lies and the D’s for not calling them on it when they do spew this crap. wake up D’s, we live in a video society-if it ain’t on TV or u-tube most people don’t know about it. it’s nice that it’s here on-line and in print but most people don’t read any more. Boner tells a whopper on the news(TV) the D’s or independant party should be on as soon as possible either calling it what it was(outright lie) of fill in the missing part of their 1/2 truths. it’s past time for the D’s to ‘grow a pair’
majii
Nov. 24th, 2012 at 8:33 pm
Good write up, Jason! Boehner is also bringing the Affordable care Act into the fiscal cliff negotiations and claiming that it’s because it raises our debt level. It doesn’t. The CBO has already run the numbers on the ACA and declared that it does not add to the debt and it saves money. The only reasons I can think of for Boehner doing this are that he wants to use the ACA as a distraction for avoiding having to deal with raising taxes on our richest citizens, and he’s trying to placate the tea partiers in his caucus and assure them that the ACA will be destroyed in one way or another. Evidently, he hasn’t seen the latest poll that shows that opposition to the ACA is lower than it’s been since the law was created in 2010, but polls have never been a force that has driven GOPer politicians because they have a unique ability to deny reality. I think the ACA will become another political landmine for the GOPers who want to repeal/destroy it, just as Medicare and Social Security have become, and this knowledge gives me unending pleasure.
Alltherest
Nov. 25th, 2012 at 10:09 am
I responded to this article but I don’t see it. Was it removed? If so, why?
sandyshores
Nov. 25th, 2012 at 7:57 pm
Raising taxes on the wealthy will do no good at all. We don’t have a tax problem we have a spending problem.
Ask yourself what you would do? You are spending more than you make. What is your solution? Cut back on the none nessecities. Can we afford wars? Can we afford solyndra? Can we afford to keep realestate that sits empty? Can we afford to hold back on leasing lands?
All of these things could bring more wealth to our nation than robbing people out of their middle class jobs.
What do we do when people loose their middle class jobs? We have to suport them and that gains us nothing because they cost more than the tax that displaced these once workers in the first place.
It takes 27 tax payers to pay for one government job. It takes one increase to get rid of all of those tax payers. It just seems like bad math.
We are just taxing a hole to china who in fact have lowered their taxes.
Just ask yourself what would happen if you lost ten percent of your income. You would sacrifice something. In the private sector that sacrifice is employees.
We have half of our people collecting government funds today. How many more can we afford?
It is much cheaper to lower the taxes and put the people to work in the private sector than to raise taxes and put them on welfare.
To satisfy the movie stars desire to increase taxes we can increase their tax with a entertainment tax.
DoUCMyG35
Nov. 26th, 2012 at 7:54 am
Were you trying to re-state the lies the above article was pointing out?
So, lowering the tax rate would put people to work in the private sector? Please elaborate. There is no historic evidence that supports that claim. And if the low taxes for the wealthy create jobs, why is there not a job explosion right now? The wealthy have been paying the lowest percentage of taxes for years. Are they investing this money in creating jobs to help people get off of welfare? Noooooo, I believe they are furiously funneling all of it into offshore bank accounts and paying lobbyists to keep their “free ride” in place.
Wuzzi
Dec. 3rd, 2012 at 8:43 pm
So… we have cut taxes on the rich repeatedly (which was a great way to play into Norquist’s hands, because when we realized it isn’t helping he suddenly began waving around all of his agreements yelling, “can’t increase taxes! can’t increase taxes!” when the ‘increase’ is actually returning to a rate that was what it was when the agreement was signed, not increasing them beyond that agreement (at least)).
Anyhow – we have cut taxes on the rich while being assured we ‘need to’ because ‘it will create more jobs.’ Meanwhile, we see outsourcing to off shore employment whenever possible, downsizing while increasing workloads and threatening remaining employees that if they complain they are next, etc.
So…
Finally, after two decades of watching this lie bear absolutely NO fruit, I finally quit listening to the Republicans. Obviously cutting taxes does not create jobs, or we wouldn’t be in the mess we are in.
Bill Benzley
Dec. 5th, 2012 at 3:35 pm
I wonder if there is a such thing as too much investment money so that tax increases might actually help- but I am not an economist.