Zippyjuan
Banned
- Joined
- Feb 5, 2008
- Messages
- 49,008
I agree that in the short term tax cuts tend to reduce revenues. In the long run it depends on where you are on the laffer curve (all things being equal).
You're totally wrong about tax cuts for the wealthy. Tax cuts for the wealthy is the main driver of economic growth. Poor people spending money does not grow the economy. Rich people investing in production is what grows the economy.
So growth comes from not from demand but from investment. If Ford Motor Company doubled the amount of cars they produce, would that would grow the economy- even if nobody could afford to buy any of those cars and they sat on sales lots? On the other hand, if people are buying more cars from Ford, they will start making more cars. You need both investment and demand. But without demand, the investment is wasted and produces nothing.
If Bill Gates took his $100 million and bought Ford stock shares, how many jobs would that create? His broker will be delighted with the commission but won't add any jobs anywhere. If people bought $100 million worth of Ford cars, how many jobs would that create? Which has the bigger impact on jobs and hence tax revenues?
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