Search for Podcasts
Trumix.com
Our New Site
Internet Radio
Podcasts
Create a Playlist


Podcast Directory:
Browse Podcasts
Add your Podcast
Remove a Podcast
Search for Podcasts
Podcast Directory
by Country
by Language
by Buzz
by Popularity
by Category
by Tags
by Region
by City
on a Google Map



Podcast Help:
What is Podcasting
Creating an XML
Podcast Hosting
Podcast Software
Firefox Plugin
Podcast Hardware




About Us:
Podcast Advertising
Contact Us
Copyright Issues
Help Wanted




Internet Radio:
Find
State
Country
Language
Music
Sports
Regions
Popularity

Discount Gold Offer

Stiletto New Price

Free Graphics


Reaganomics at War Episode | THE POPULIST

PodcastDirectory / Unknown / History
PodcastDirectory / Regions / /



THE POPULIST

Primary Format :
History

Also Listed as:

User Tags:

User Votes:

RSS Feed
Website

Visit Trumix.com for the most recent listings of:

Reaganomics at War


Reaganomics at War

Play Now -->

DATE : Thu, 31 Aug 2006 20:16:00 GMT
Entered in Database : 2006-08-31 20:16:00
length : 4359785
Link to the Show / Show Notes


A. Scott Piraino

In 1981, when Ronald Reagan was sworn in, this country faced the worst economic downturn since the Great Depression. President Reagan proposed a novel solution, lowering tax rates on the wealthiest Americans so they could spend and invest more money. His administration argued that only this increased economic activity could lift the country out of recession.

Quasi-economic terms like "supply side" and "trickle down" were used to give Reagan's proposal an academic veneer. In fact Reaganomics was nothing more than intellectual camouflage for cutting tax rates on the rich. And if these tax cuts were unfair and would create the largest national debt in history, well so what.

Twenty five years later our national debt has climbed to 8.5 trillion dollars. Yearly interest payments on that debt have ballooned to 300 over billion dollars. But these facts did not deter President Bush.

His administration used the recession of 2001 to justify a 1.35 trillion dollar tax cut package. Like Reagan, President Bush sold his plan as a tax break for all Americans, knowing these reductions would favor the wealthy. While reducing income taxes for everyone, his administration quietly increased payroll taxes on working Americans.

Social Security and Medicare are flat taxes on all wage income. That means there are no write-offs or deductions, and all payroll income is taxed at the same flat rate.

Of course the wealthiest Americans don't worry about payroll taxes because they don't have jobs. They own capital, invested money that makes more money. President Bush reduced top capital gains tax rate from 20 to 15 percent and cut the top rate on dividends from 35 to 15 percent.

Since this is not payroll income, the owners of capital do not contribute to Social Security and Medicare.

What that means is, an American working a burger flipping job pays 7.5 percent in payroll taxes before his income tax rate is even calculated. Then he pays income tax on top of that.

Now lets say some Wall Street trader made a million dollars in profits from stock dividends. He would pay a flat fifteen percent in taxes on all that money. In other words, the Wall Street Trader would pay taxes at a lower rate than an American worker flipping burgers.  

Payroll taxes account for over one third of federal revenue, and nearly all the budget surpluses up to 2001. Yet President Bush did not suggest reducing these taxes, or making them fair. Instead the Bush administration continues the fiction that workers are contributing to a "trust fund", while spending the surpluses from payroll taxes as general revenue.

This would have been just another craven transfer of wealth to the rich if not for the tragic events of September 11th.

After the terrorist attacks, the recession of 2001 suddenly looked like an economic crisis. The surpluses of the previous four years disappeared, spent on military operations, emergency relief, and a bailout for the airlines. The Bush administration announced an emergency budget increase, and a return to deficit spending.

The budget deficit for 2002 exceeded 400 billion dollars, a new record high.

With US forces occupying Iraq and Afghanistan, the Bush administration had the audacity to suggest another round of tax cuts for the wealthy. They even had the nerve to call it "patriotic tax relief". In the spring of 2003, President Bush signed legislation further reducing taxes by 350 billion dollars.  

The War in Iraq is costing over four billion dollars a month, there are one million fewer jobs in this country than when George the Second took office, our trade and budget deficits are soaring, and this President either doesn't have a clue, or he doesn't care.

It's not that he believes in Reaganomics, or "supply side", or "trickle down". George Bush doesn't believe in anything. He's a wealthy thief, and a paid mouthpiece for wealthy thieves.

Make no mistake, Reaganomics has done exactly what it was supposed to do. It has made the richest Americans much wealthier, while transferring more of the tax burden to the middle class and working poor.

There is simply no mystery to Reaganomics.

The poorest Americans have seen their living standards decline over the last twenty five years, while incomes for our wealthiest citizens have soared. Under president Bush our wealthiest citizens have received more tax cuts, while the rest of us pay for the War on Terror, and pay down the debt created by Reaganomics.

It's a disgrace.

...


Play in your Iphone