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| quote: | Originally posted by Joss Weatherby
Look at governments that implement social policy like the Scandinavian countries. All of them, including Finland, have a budget surpluses and they have very large governments and an incredibly high standard of living. Governments don't suck, just ours.
But thats too much in the eyes of your party, right? |
Yeah... and what? You think they pay $2.40/gallon of gas there? The cost of living in Stockholm or Oslo or Helsinki is a lot higher than most places here. Why do you think that we can get all you dream of without it costing more to the individual citizen?
Well, yes I do think it's too much... and it has nothing to do with the eyes of my party. Most people (and companies) should pay their fair share (and I stress the word 'fair'); instead, an increasingly larger percentage of the overall tax burden gets saddled on the achievers. I'm sorry but it's the acheivers and risk takers who provide the climate for almost 80% of employment. Economics 101: the more you raise the tax burden, the more you depress the activity that's being taxed. If you make life more difficult for them, you'll see what you're seeing now: no incentive to invest, laying off workers, picking up stakes and moving operations to other countries, and less revenue going to government by both individuals and companies.
| quote: | | pkcRAISTLIN: how to you plan to reduce the deficit with even more tax cuts? |
I'm no economist, but it's a stone cold fact that tax cuts spur economic activity, which lead to more money going to the government. Bush's tax cuts sent more tax dollars to the federal government than EVER. Unfortunately, much of that was grossly mismanaged.
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