Thursday, March 3, 2011

How Recent Tax Cuts For Wealthy Americans Hurt The Rest Of Us (Who Just Happen To Be The Majority)

(Wealthy Americans) claim that they can invest the money they save from taxes and thereby create jobs, etc. But do they? In fact, cutting rich people's taxes is often very bad for the rest of us (beyond the worsening inequality and hobbled government it produces). A case in point is the ongoing budget crisis in Wisconsin, which was created when the guv'ner gave massive tax incentives to corporations to 'create jobs' (I was taught at SFA that demand for products creates jobs and demand can't be created by giving tax incentives to corporations. Demand comes from consumers, who are being hurt by tax cuts to the wealthy.) So who now must cover those tax incentives (cuts)? Teachers, firemen and women, policemen and women, snowplow drivers, nurses, and anyone in Wisconsin who utilizes state resources in any way.

Several examples show this. First, a good part of the money the rich save from taxes is then lent by them to the government (in the form of buying US Treasury securities for their personal investment portfolios). It would obviously be better for the government to tax the rich to maintain its expenditures, and thereby avoid deficits and debts. Then the government would not need to tax the rest of us to pay interest on those debts to the rich.

Second, the richest Americans take the money they save from taxes and invest big parts of it in China, India and elsewhere. That often produces more jobs over there, fewer jobs here, and more imports of goods produced abroad. US dollars flow out to pay for those imports and so accumulate in the hands of foreign banks and foreign governments. They, in turn, lend from that wealth to the US government because it does not tax our rich, and so we get taxed to pay for the interest Washington has to give those foreign banks and governments. The largest single recipient of such interest payments today is the People's Republic of China.

Third, the richest Americans take the money they don't pay in taxes and invest it in hedge funds and with stockbrokers to make profitable investments. These days, that often means speculating in oil and food, which drives up their prices, undermines economic recovery for the mass of Americans, and produces acute suffering around the globe. Those hedge funds and brokers likewise use part of the money rich people save from taxes to speculate in the US stock markets. That has recently driven stock prices higher: hence, the stock market recovery. And that mostly helps – you guessed it – the richest Americans who own most of the stocks.

Common Dreams, italicized comments by me.