Posted on 02/06/2007 7:34:56 AM PST by DredTennis
Call it Operation Enduring Tax Cuts. President Bush's $2.9 trillion fiscal 2008 budget attempts to balance the federal budget by 2012. According to the proposal, the U.S. government would run a $61 billion surplus that year, though the projected deficits in 2010 ($94.4 billion) and 2011 ($53.8 billion) would be so small relative to the size of a projected $18 trillion economy0.6 percent and 0.3 percent of gross domestic productas to be financially insignificant.
The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office also shows the budget moving into balance after 2010, but there is a key difference from the Bush budget: The CBO assumes the 2001 and 2003 Bush tax cuts will expire, thereby bringing in a load of new tax revenue. The Bush budget assumes the tax cuts stay in place.
How does Bush propose to move Uncle Sam into the black? By slowing spending growthhe wants to hold nonsecurity, nonentitlement discretionary spending to 1 percent annual growthand assuming slightly higher GDP growth of 3.0 percent vs. 2.8 percent over the next five years than the CBO does.
Yet a continuing faster-than-expected pace of tax revenue growth may still allow the budget to be balanced before 2012. The budget conservatively projects future revenue growth that averages 5.4 percent over the next six years, about equal to the projected overall growth in the economy.
Yet again so far this year, the government is taking in way more in tax receipts than expected. Receipts in January came in at a 13 percent year-over-year pace. As an analysis from Action Economics concludes, "Even though the CBO knocked down its [fiscal 2007] deficit forecast by a hefty $114 billion just two weeks ago [to $172 billion], it already appears that their new revenue forecasts are unrealistically pessimistic."
(Excerpt) Read more at usnews.com ...
What do the Democrats not understand about, "If it ain't broke don't fix it?"
But to a democrat, the tax system is broke unless the rich pay 'their fair share'. A democrat would sacrifice economic growth to ensure the rich are heavily taxed. If it results in less tax revenue, you can always make up the difference by raising taxes on the rich even more.
heh heh, sure they are!! "The CBO assumes the 2001 and 2003 Bush tax cuts will expire, thereby bringing in a load of new tax revenue."
Like that EVER works!!! Higher taxes mean LESS tax revenue, you must have learned that by now MSM! "Yet a continuing faster-than-expected pace of tax revenue growth ...".
Only faster than expected BY YOU!!! "Yet again so far this year, the government is taking in way more in tax receipts than expected. Receipts in January came in at a 13 percent year-over-year pace. "
JUST LIKE WE SAID IT WOULD. Good Lord, I think amnesia is the only excuse left for these ("useful")idiots.
When Dems propose tax hikes, almost anyone working ends up being "rich".
There is another part to it. The democrat constituency loves that 'class warfare rhetoric'. The democrat politicians know it doesn't work for all the reasons you mentioned but they don't care, it keeps getting them elected. And, that is the most important thing to a politician. Term limits would do wonders for this 'Republic' of ours.
I think term limits can deprive us of some good people. The same goal can be accomplished by defining and narrowing the rules each house is able to impose upon itself. For example, take away the power of seniority by having committee and subcommittee chairmanships rotate each session rather than automatically going to the highest seniority. That would devalue seniority and the power it brings with it thereby giving less incentive to keep getting elected.
Eliminate secret holds that members put on appointments, etc. The abuses occur because of the "courtesies" that members extend to each other. There are many others most of us don't know about.
In other words, it is a good ole boys club which enhances the ability of members to keep getting reelected. It is "You scratch my back and ... " An example is the irritating (to me) habit of addressing colleagues they can't stand as "My good friend, the Senator from the great state of ...."
Eliminate those abuses and the problem is solved without losing valuable experience and good solid politicians. Of course you are asking those who developed and perpetrate the system to change it, just like the tax code.
However, public influence can affect them and with email, faxes, and cheaper telephone calls it is much easier than before. We should do it and do it often.
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