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Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices

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To: TigerPaw who wrote (287549)5/10/2006 5:52:04 PM
From: combjelly  Read Replies (1) of 1571775
 
"Stimulation from the tax cut was negligible."

In 2005, the Congressional Budget Office released a paper called "Analyzing the Economic and Budgetary Effects of a 10 Percent Cut in Income Tax Rates" [2] that casts doubt on the idea that tax cuts ultimately improve the government's fiscal situation. Unlike earlier research, the CBO paper examines the budgetary impact of any possible macroeconomic effects of tax policies, i.e., it attempts to account for how tax cuts affect the overall size of the economy, and therefore influence future government tax revenues; and ultimately, deficits or surpluses. The paper's author forecasts the effects using various assumptions (e.g., people's foresight, the mobility of capital and the ways in which the federal government might make up for the lost revenue). Even in the paper's most generous scenario, only 28% of lost tax revenue is recouped over a 10-year period after a 10% tax-rate cut. The paper points out that these shortfalls in revenue would have to be made up by federal borrowing: the paper estimates that the federal government would pay an extra $200 billion in interest over the decade covered by his analysis. The 10% tax cut would result in a 1% increase in gross national product. The paper appears to focus on Federal government revenue only and does not look at the total public sector revenue (i.e., it does not include increases in local and state government revenue).

en.wikipedia.org
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