But Congress and the president are loath to do nothing. No one wants to be accused of sitting idly by while the economy collapses. So the two different spending bills passed by the House and about to be passed by the Senate do something, but there are doubts whether they will do enough or do the right things. Republicans and conservative Democrats trimmed the Senate's spending in an effort to reduce the gargantuan borrowing, but critics say the items trimmed are among the most stimulative in the original bill — aid to states for infrastructure projects and additional aid for the unemployed.
I find it baffling that tax cuts remain in this bill. After eight years of GOP tax cutting, which contributed to record budget deficits, we're still pushing for more tax cuts? For an element of the Republican Party, tax cuts are the panacea for all problems, economic and political. While I am sympathetic to the notion of reducing government's share of the economy and agree that a severe recession is no time to be raising taxes, additional tax cuts seem at this time illogical and ineffective. Last year's tax rebates did almost nothing to stimulate the economy. More tax cuts are likely to be hoarded by wary consumers worried about their jobs as unemployment rises unabated.
After months of effort to fix the economy, the basic problem — unpaid mortgages on houses with declining values — remains. Last year's original rescue plan was supposed to buy up those "toxic assets" and allow banks to begin lending again. But former Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson decided to invest the money directly into the banks themselves, not into their bad debts. But just like the consumers who hoarded their tax rebates, banks hoarded the federal cash and tried to ride out the downturn. New Treasury Secretary Timothy Geitner is promising a new attack on those "toxic assets."
One tax cut in the Senate package has been called the $15,000 house flipper bonus. In an effort to stimulate the real estate market, it would provide a $15,000 tax break to anyone who buys a house. You don't have to be a CPA to figure out that you can buy any old house, sell it the next week for $5,000 less than you paid and still come out $10,000 ahead. Let's hope this example of wrong-headed legislating doesn't make it into the final bill.
Congress is eager to get something done, and most Americans are all for taking action to fix the economy. Unanswered questions remain: Will this package be enough? Will the economy take the medicine that is being offered? Will this unimaginable amount of money be spent wisely? Will the economic stimulus do enough good to offset the inevitable pain of having to repay this money in higher taxes or higher inflation in years to come?
Nobody really knows the answers to these questions now.
....tax cuts for business results in entrepreneurs expecting a ROI. A rebate is not a tax cut it is a gift for people to squander away, as they did.
ReplyDeletePeople(mainly people with good sums of money) invest their $$$ for that roi. That is what puts people to work and is the oil for the economy.
Tax cuts for business' is the real way to get this engine back running smoothly.
Investors find it way too risky to let their $$$ flow into business ventures today b/c of the fear clouding the US future and lack of true free enterprise based leadership.
What ground our economy to a halt? The theory that government could force the financial system to provide housing to all, even those who could not handle that responsibility. Thank you jimmy carter(cra of '77) and bill clinton(cra on steroids in the '90s) and all those who fell for this feel good mantra and thanks to the greedy who devised complicated schemes to take advantage of these failed policies.
Folks, we are in trouble and we all are to blame.
I'm not to blame. I didn't vote for Bush and Cheney.
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ReplyDelete...if you voted for carter and clinton, or either of the 2, yes you are to blame.
Bush and Cheney only did what was necessary to keep your butt safe for the past 7 years.
But, you knew that.
Bush/Cheney aren't the only ones to blame for the state of our economy. Our society has come to believe that everyone "deserves" a 2500+ square foot house, that each child "needs" his/her own roomm, that every high school student "needs" his/her own car. 40 or 50 years ago, people were content with much less. 2 or more children shared a bedroom, there were plenty of high school kids without cars, and the average house size was probably closer to 1500 or 1800 square feet. Greed has taken us to this state.
ReplyDeleteStop blaming the politicians. Sure, they are responsible for some things, but they didn't force anyone to buy homes that they couldn't afford. They didn't force CEOs to take huge bonuses. They didn't force Americans to go into massive credit card debt.
ReplyDelete....
ReplyDelete...the problem is not the credit card debt as much as it is the mortgage debt to people who could not afford homes in the first place. But the politicians who were buying votes w/ this policy convinced the subprime mkt borrowers otherwise. So they loaded up on real estate and then the the big bad wolf huffed and puffed and humpty-dumpty came tumbling down.
And then that debt (cdo's and cmo's) were re-packaged (thanks to Bob Rubin ex sec of treasury and ex citibank ceo) and resold all across the world in hopes that spreading the risk would handle WHEN the subprime defaults hit.
Failed liberal policies and guess what yous ands mees is gonna pay. The sad part is most of these mortgage failures are still riding around in their pimped out escalades. Go figure.