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Strategies & Market Trends : The Residential Real Estate Crash Index

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To: MulhollandDrive who wrote (17948)3/3/2004 1:40:46 PM
From: Lizzie TudorRead Replies (1) of 306849
 
Here it comes...... (this is a wierd article because they are talking about tax cuts and refunds, however the gist of it is that people are paying less taxes than "predicted" by this treasury team- DOH)

Early tax returns subject of economic-policy debate

Susan Herring, an economist at UBS, said the IRS's numbers make it appear that the Treasury Department's forecast might be overstated. Still, she said many upper-class taxpayers, who don't typically receive refunds and don't usually file early, will get big checks this year because of the tax-code changes.

Those changes are also expected to lower the amount that taxpayers who owe money with their returns must shell out by approximately $13 billion, from $85 billion to $72.5 billion.

Referring to the Treasury Department's monthly treasury statements, EPI's Max Sawicky said that compared to last year more money is being collected in some months and in others the proceeds are down.

"If taxes were driving the economy, every month the treasury would collect more," Sawicky added.
(which is what happened in the 90s when we clearly had a robust economy)
biz.yahoo.com
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