Originally posted by Sikander
1) Everyone got a tax break, and no one moreso than the poor.
1) Everyone got a tax break, and no one moreso than the poor.
2) In order to free up money for investment by cutting taxes you have to actually impact tax rates where investment money lives, largely in the wealthiest half of the population. Almost everyone benefits from the larger pool of investment capital, but no one moreso than an upwardly mobile person of limited initial means. They can borrow for education, to buy a home, to start a business. When there is no investment funding available only those who already have money can afford these advantages.
Eliminating income taxes entirely on the poor would give them a very marginal benefit (they don't pay a very high percentage of their income to begin with) with a corresponding marginal impact on tax revenues. There would be a small increase in economic activity due to the slightly higher level of spending by the poor. The main reason that the government hasn't already simply eliminated the (negligible) taxes the poor pay is that it is felt there is a social advantage to having everyone feel themselves a stakeholder in our society.
Eliminating income taxes entirely on the poor would give them a very marginal benefit (they don't pay a very high percentage of their income to begin with) with a corresponding marginal impact on tax revenues. There would be a small increase in economic activity due to the slightly higher level of spending by the poor. The main reason that the government hasn't already simply eliminated the (negligible) taxes the poor pay is that it is felt there is a social advantage to having everyone feel themselves a stakeholder in our society.
And besides, more consumer expenditure alone will just result in higher inflation. A more progressive tax system is what is needed...
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