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June 19, 2013
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What’s in a Name? George W. Regrets Dubbing Those ‘Bush Tax Cuts’Posted on Apr 12, 2012By Joe Conason When George W. Bush made his first public appearance in many months to discuss economic policy in New York on Tuesday, his utterances may have revealed more than he intended. “I wish they weren’t called the ‘Bush tax cuts,’” he said of the decade-old rate reductions that bear his name. But does he really believe, as he seemed to suggest, that Americans want to let those cuts expire from a desire to spite him? Or is there a deeper Bush somewhere within who would prefer not to be associated with fiscal profligacy and ideological overreach? Whatever his motives, Bush’s curious remark draws a sharp contrast with his predecessor Bill Clinton—who often speaks proudly of the tax increase that was so central to his first budget as president two decades ago. Clinton, who talks publicly far more often than Bush, often notes that the 1993 tax increase, supported only by Democrats, was the first step toward balance and growth after a dozen years of Republican irresponsibility and stagnation. It isn’t clear that Bush actually understands the indelible effects of his tax and spending policies. Someone should explain to him what is so painfully obvious when the numbers are added up: Not only should the tax cuts be named after him, so should the deficit and the debt. The simple math is worth keeping in mind when Bush turns up to advocate maintaining the cuts he passed and legislating still more, which he claims will stimulate the private sector. “Much of the public debate is about our balance sheet ... or entitlements,” he said, but the solution in his view is to focus on private sector growth. “The pie grows, the debt relative to the pie shrinks, and with fiscal discipline you can solve your deficits,” said Bush at a Manhattan conference sponsored by his George W. Bush Presidential Center on “Tax Policies for 4 Percent Growth.” Bush Center founding director James Glassman was present to repeat all the usual Republican bromides about incentivizing growth by cutting taxes on the wealthy, preferably to zero. But as Clinton points out in “Back to Work,” the book he published last fall, it was his tax increases on the upper brackets (along with spending cuts) that propelled the country toward fiscal balance and a vanishing debt before Bush assumed office in 2001. Advertisement The economic narrative of the Republican presidential campaign will blame increased deficits and debt on President Obama—and argue that cutting federal budgets while reducing taxes on the wealthy will somehow restore growth. Certainly that is what Bush tried to suggest in New York when he spoke so wistfully of his endangered tax cuts. But the math undercuts him. According to the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, Bush’s tax cuts and war spending will account for nearly half of the $20 trillion in debt that will be accumulated by 2019. (That doesn’t include his misconceived and costly Medicare prescription drug benefit.) The Obama stimulus and financial bailouts, including the auto revival, will be responsible for less than $2 trillion of the total debt by then, or less than 10 percent. With due respect to the former president, public revulsion over his failed policies long ago transcended him. Those Bush tax cuts, by any other name, would smell no sweeter.
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By EmileZ, April 13, 2012 at 5:00 am Link to this comment
Re: “Or is there a deeper Bush somewhere within who would prefer not to be associated with fiscal profligacy and ideological overreach?”
I didn’t hear the speech so I couldn’t say, but who knows???
Maybe now that he has fulfilled his duties, proven to his family that he was not a fuck-up, and gotten his memoir out of the way, he is beginning to realize that he, and all those around him who were no doubt patronizing him in the most shameless and disgusting fashion, were in fact much worse fuck-ups than he ever could have imagined.
Report thisBy mrfreeze, April 12, 2012 at 1:23 pm Link to this comment
Those Bush Tax Cuts are the gift that keeps giving to republicans. As I recall, at the beginning of the cuts, families were given an initial check of $600 (something like that) as a “refund of their own money.” It’s $600 that bought votes to this day. It was a stroke of true genius by W’s administration and conservatives as a whole.
Report thisBy felicity, April 12, 2012 at 11:43 am Link to this comment
Old Henry Ford knew what made our economy hum. When
asked by his fellow-capitalists (with horror) why he
paid his employees $5/day he said, “So they can buy
my cars.”
If you want to know why capital is flooding the
financial sector to the detriment of the
manufacturing sector? A GM executive explained it,
“We make cars so we can make car loans.”
And of course today’s economists, particularly those
Report thiswho wear Republican stripes meet the definition of an
economist - a guy who can’t tell you tomorrow why
what he predicted yesterday would happen today didn’t
happen. Hell, the Nobel Prize committee awarded
Nobel Prizes in economics to two guys - two different
years - whose economic theories were diametrically
opposed to each other.
By samosamo, April 12, 2012 at 10:15 am Link to this comment
w talking economics? HAHAHAHAHAHA. Now if he was talking
Report thisfiscal responsibility, I would be afraid and know he was lying,
one of his personal characteristics for seeming to be a person of
integrity. Maybe he should have his own comedy show. At least
we would know how many people would watch it, himself.
By Stuart Davies, April 12, 2012 at 7:31 am Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)
“With due respect to the former president” (Bush)???
Report thisRespect is due to this witless buffoon simply because he was installed in the white house? Even though he was not legitimately elected in either election? Gimme a break, mate.
By rbe4free, April 12, 2012 at 5:04 am Link to this comment
He didn’t seem to mind the stream of money he made and continues to make from his choices.
The cause is our Fiat monetary driven, socio-economic system, until we get rid of it, nothing will change. Want a real solution? Check out The Venus Project, if you have questions see the FAQ page.
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