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€uromeinke, FEJ. and Ghoulish Delight RULE!!! NA abides. |
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#781 | |
I Floop the Pig
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I've posted several stats and links before that show that there is zero evidence for any direct causal relationship between tax decrease and increased tax revenue. There are way too many factors, and way too much variation on the results to even remotely link the two.
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#782 |
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Join Date: Feb 2005
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Yes, but there are similar economic events coincident with most of the big changes. How do you pick and choose. As is so often said, correlation is not causation.
And why did it only start working in 1987? All of the previous changes in the rate didn't do much to move the revenue unless you are going to say that a rate reduction in 1982 took 5 years before having a major impact while a relatively small rate reduction in 2002 caused an immediately tripling of it. And a big rate increase in 1972-3 did nothing really, but relatively smaller one in 1987 immediately tanked it. There are four spikes in the graph. The first happened when rates went up. The second happened when rates were unchanged. The third peaked two years after they went down but the peak starts before the change. The fourth happens simultaneously. Or it could be the there is no strong causal connection and that they are just inversely impacted by the same underlying things. I don't know if that is the case. But while the chart seems to indicate an inverse directional correlation it doesn't seem to be consistent in scale and none of that indicates cause. Perhaps when when the revenues go too high that creates political pressure to increase taxes on those who are getting rich in the stock market and so congress does this but since the stock market is somewhat cyclical they generally do this at just around the same time that things start to go south? I have no idea if that is true but it would be a causal link in the opposite direction (success brings to light money that government thinks it can take without outrage so it does). In 2002 you had the dotcom bust which is a not rate possibility for why revenues fell. But in 2000 you had the dotcom boom which would also be a non-rate indicator of why they rose. While the Wall Street Journal editors obviously accept the causal link you'll find plenty of other economists and market journalists who do not. And of course, it ignores the fact that even if a previous decrease caused an increase that this does not mean that further decreases would do so. Plus, what if it is just the downward movement that does it, and it isn't so important what the actual rate is? Then this would mean that every once in a while you need to dramatically increase it again, take the short term hit, so that you can go about lowering it in steps again. Just like eventually the Fed is going to have to raise rates back up to 4-5% again otherwise they won't have the stimulus tool of lowering them available (as Japan learned once they hit zero). |
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#783 |
I throw stones at houses
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Well, that's the hell of economics. There are always multiple unaccounted for factors. Like when the Fed though they'd figured out the relationship between inflation and unemployment back in the 70's. That worked out real well.
(Though again, true to this argument, there are other factors that contributed to runaway inflation in the 70's, like women entering the workforce in droves)
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#784 | |
I LIKE!
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My favorite economist, Dr. Walter Williams, on the capital gain tax rate...
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#785 |
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That is true. But if maximizing capital gains (not capital gains tax revenues) is the only goal then the obvious answer is to have zero taxes. And this would apply to pretty much every other form of taxation. Taxes have a suppressing effect.
I wouldn't contest that at all. However, that is not the same as saying that an increase or decrease in a tax always has the inverse impact on revenues from that tax. Obviously that is not true. Going from 1% to 0% tax will decrease the depressing effect of that tax but it will not increase the revenue of the tax. I'll happily come closer to your side on the question of whether capital gains should be taxes at all. |
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#786 |
I throw stones at houses
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Well obviously it would help if they sought the point of maximum benefit, because one expects the benefit to be a curve (or curves).
I can't believe I can't think of the name for that point on the graph, but you know what I'm getting at here. The point at which a movement in either direction would see a decreasing benefit in terms of total tax paid.
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#787 | |
I Floop the Pig
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In other news, Howard Dean is stepping up pressure on Superdelegates to state who they're supporting, which in turn is indirect pressure for Clinton to drop out.
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'He who receives an idea from me, receives instruction himself without lessening mine; as he who lights his taper at mine, receives light without darkening me.' -TJ |
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#788 |
I throw stones at houses
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Hmm... CP, GD, anyone, wanna do phone bank for Barack? They've even got a location called "The Lot".
http://my.barackobama.com/page/content/nvp2region6/ I could do Saturday morning, perhaps. As long as they don't mind a registered Libertarian phone banking for them.
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http://bash.org/?top "It is useless for sheep to pass a resolution in favor of vegetarianism while wolves remain of a different opinion." -- William Randolph Inge |
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#789 |
ohhhh baby
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I have considered doing the phone thing for Barack for months now, but I have to bow out. (The site is always asking for volunteers.) I simply do not like it when people call me to support their candidate. It makes me like the candidate less. I can't do it to other people in good conscience, even though it may help.
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#790 |
Worn Romantic
Join Date: Feb 2006
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Here's something not being reported by the "liberal" (cough, cough) mainstream press.
I'm sure those who think the words of Rev Wright make Sen Obama disqualified to be President will now denounce Sen McCain. It's only fair, after all.
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