Scott and I went back and forth on that for a while. Here are some things I believe:
I don't think if you give a business a tax cut they will use that money to hire people with rare exception. Scott says he would, but if he was being truthful, he'd have to fall into the 1 percentile. Most would just pocket the money, and hire people when demand for their product compelled them to.
This leads to a second question. How do you best structure taxes to facilitate this? It's my belief that the upper .1% of the country could pay more taxes. But before we just assume this means the bottom 50% pay less, we have to accept the fact that we're in a heap of debt. Also, something like the bottom 34% of the country don't pay any federal tax (net, post tax filing), but they are taxed in other ways. Such as trickle down taxes passed down by business owners who are charging them what they will pay, with the taxes rolled into that. Is that fair taxation? It wouldn't be, except is also shows you just how huge the split in the classes is, when the bottom third of the country is so poor, and getting poorer.
The other argument is that by cutting taxes, especially capital gains taxes, it will encourage people to invest in companies. But this is only partly true. The argument that putting money into the consumers hands is an equally large part of the puzzle, but it's rarely discussed today, and considered part of Keynesian economics, which is evil to most conservatives, who have effectively intimidated Democrats from advocating it. The problem with this system is that with wages badly suppressed, and high unemployment for years now, and likely years to come, we're entirely expecting businesses to use lower taxes to pass on to employees. We have been for three decades. Do you think it works? I don't.
A "liberal" side of the government economic argument is that a great way to get the economy stimulated is to create federal jobs, such as the WPA, and the government is the only employer who can really do this. The problem is that the government is also in deep debt. This could be off-set in my opinion on a higher tax rate for the super wealthy. Even letting the Bush tax cuts expire would have helped with this. I also think as a percentage of the GDP, our debt is less than half of what it is in Japan. What we have is a debt of jobs and working wages more than anything. Again, the Tea Party believes that with little or no government spending, that money would flow freely in the economy causing it to grow, and with it jobs increase.
There are other areas where I think that we could see real change, beyond the obvious of things like eliminating the tax credits for the oil industry, companies like GE, etc. which is just free money from the government.
• First is that I firmly believe in SBA Prime and SBA microloans. These are government backed loans that true small businesses can get at very low rates. They range from $5k up to $75k I believe. The average loan amount is $13k. Picture a landscaper, or a hot dog stand vendor, the tiny LBS down the street, etc. But banks aren't making these loans, and there's nothing forcing them to, so both the Republicans and Democrats and Obama are heavily trimming them. Incredibly stupid.
• I also favor allowing people to use unemployment benefits for self-employment assistance. A few states have this already. Hence, many people can't find work at all in this economy. In my idea they would use their unemployment, coupled with an SBA Prime loan to start their own small business. Even if the business failed completely, they would be producing at least something for the economy, and learn in the process. Now, so many are sitting around finding no work. The "99ers" many are called.
• I also believe that the corporate tax rate everyone screams about needs to be completely overhauled. The top rate is 38%. Some companies move their operations overseas because of it. Yet some companies manage to pay zero. Scott mentioned a plan kicked around by Obama and Imelt to cut this rate down to nothing, but with contingencies on putting brick and mortar businesses in the US, with US workers. I would very likely support such a plan.
Of course there are other ways to balance the budget. Cuts to defense spending for one. Plus there's the argument of overhauling the health care in the country, which we have discussed, as it accounts for so much of government spending. The Tea Party aren't interested in overhauls, only cuts it seems. Or actually eliminating Medicare and Medicaid. This is what angers me most.
Got to run. Will comment on the Tea Party "Hobbits" later.