![]() |
Delay = RINO
Quote:
The economy is now growing and the deficit is getting smaller. The economy was growing in the 1990s and the Republican congress balanced the budget. |
Delay = RINO
Quote:
Why do you assume that any mention of Presidential influence on the budgeting process = a complete misunderstanding of constitutional law? |
Delay = RINO
Quote:
I really do feel like Captain Obvious if I have to point out that the legislative process includes two branches of government. Do you give Reagan no credit for the 1986 Tax Bill? |
Delay = RINO
Quote:
|
Delay = RINO
Quote:
|
Here are the numnbers.
Quote:
You've mentioned this bit of ancient political history twice today -- must have really burned you up how Newt and the GOP took all of the political heat for that event. A skilled politician and communicator versus a committed ideologue. S_A_M |
Delay = RINO
Quote:
|
Delay = RINO
Quote:
|
Quote:
We've been such fools. I see it now. I'm switching parties this year! S_A_M P.S. For someone who deals in numbers as much as you do, and presumably studied statistics in college (at least one basic course), I'm a bit surprised that you seem to assume that correlation equals causation, and that you have so little appreciation for the many potential confounding variables at work. Nope. It's -- "Hey Boys, Newt and Trent took over, we're saved! The world is finally safe for rich, investors. Turn the big wheel and lower the rates!" |
Delay = RINO
Quote:
If you remember that is what kept happening during the late ninetys. The deficits were always surprizingly smaller than predicted because of the phenonminal growth. |
Delay = RINO
Quote:
|
Delay = RINO
Quote:
|
Delay = RINO
Quote:
Here are some figures for 1992 and 2000, the beginning and end of the Clinton Administration. Everything is taken from historical governmental statistics and is in billions of dollars. 1992: GDP 6,240 Government Receipts: 1,091 Receipts from Individual Income Taxes: 476 Receipts from Corporate Income Taxes: 100 Government Outlays: 1,381 2000: GDP 9,708 (up a bit more than 50%) Government Receipts: 2,025 (up by almost 100%) Receipts from Individual Income Taxes: 1,004 (up more than 100%) Receipts from Corporation Income Taxes: 207 (up more than 100%) Government Outlays: 1,788 (up about 30%) So, government outlays grew more slowly than GDP (30% versus 50%) while government income grew much faster than GDP (100% versus 50%). Income taxes as a percentage of governmental receipts grew somewhat. OK, this tells me that the level of deficit reduction that occurred depended very heavily on the tax component. It also tells me that government grew more slowly than the economy, which is a general victory for those desiring a smaller government. As I said, I'm not an economist and I'm sure there are dynamic forces, and I'm also sure that some might have cut more or raised less, but I think it is very hard in these numbers to see room for the scale of deficit reduction that occurred without the tax component. The statement that "the growing economy was the biggest factor..." does not appear right, because governmental receipts grew much faster than the economy, and this differential makes up a very large part of the surplus. Indeed, had governmental receipts grown at the same rate as the economy, about 50%, there would have been no surplus and the economy would have continued in substantial deficit. |
Delay = RINO
Quote:
I will try to say something funny about the budget. |
Delay = RINO
Quote:
|
| All times are GMT -4. The time now is 08:50 AM. |
Powered by: vBulletin, Copyright ©2000 - 2008, Jelsoft Enterprises Limited.
Hosted By: URLJet.com