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Five Things The White House Doesnt Want You To Know This Election Season

Friday, October 12, 2012 8:41
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(Before It's News)

Friday, October 12, 2012


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From Bloomberg:

Election campaigns are about promises: the more grandiose, the better.

Who can forget President Barack Obama’s June 2008 speech, telling a rapt audience that future generations would look back at his victory in the Democratic primaries as “the moment when the rise of the oceans began to slow, and our planet began to heal”?

If only he had substituted “deficit” for “oceans.”

Candidates love to promise the moon – at minimum, a colony on it – and the stars. Years ago, they could avoid mentioning the cost. Nowadays, the U.S. is in such a deep fiscal hole that a candidate would appear to be out of touch if he didn’t invoke “shared sacrifice” or pay lip service to reducing the deficit.

Yet that is where they draw the line and limit the specifics. Which is why I’m here to tell you five things the 2012 Democrats don’t want you to know. (Next week, it’s the Republicans’ turn.)

No. 1: The president doesn’t create jobs.

“Pass this bill now,” Obama exhorted a joint session of Congress on Sept. 8, 2011, in a nationally televised address. He was referring to his proposed American Jobs Act, which he said would put people back to work by paying businesses – giving them a tax break – to hire new workers.

Now that makes sense! Neither the Republican-controlled House nor the Democratic-controlled Senate had much interest in what was dubbed “son of stimulus.”

Experts were quick to crank up their models and pump out estimates. The bill would create 1.3 million jobs by the end of 2012 at a cost of only $450 billion, or $346,153 per job. Far simpler just to cut a check to those folks…

If the government could create jobs, the U.S. would be at full employment all the time. That doesn’t mean the occupant of the Oval Office has no influence. The president creates an environment for job creation by encouraging entrepreneurship and working with Congress to craft a favorable tax and regulatory backdrop. Bashing business, be it insurance companies, banks, or oil producers, for short-term gain isn’t the way to win friends and influence people. And it’s hardly an inducement for the private sector.

No. 2: Middle-class taxes are going up.

Unless the U.S. generates a lot more wealthy Americans – unless we can “grow the rich,” so to speak – raising taxes on upper-income earners won’t solve the deficit problem. The top 10 percent already pay 70 percent of the federal income tax. The Buffett rule, which would impose a minimum 30 percent tax rate on millionaires, would raise less than $50 billion over 11 years, according to Congress’s Joint Committee on Taxation. (That assumes the Bush tax cuts expire and the alternative minimum tax isn’t indexed for inflation.)

Even Obama’s proposed 2013 budget, which limits the rate of itemized deductions, would raise $520 billion of revenue over 10 years, according to the committee’s estimates.

Given the federal government’s predilection for spending every dime that comes in (and more), the awful truth is that the government will have to trickle down the income ladder to scoop up the revenue needed to reduce the deficit.

It’s true that the recession and subpar recovery depleted the Treasury’s coffers. Tax receipts as a share of gross domestic product plummeted to a six-decade low of 15.1 percent in 2009 and 2010 and are inching back slowly.

The government needs to raise additional revenue: It can enact higher tax rates or eliminate loopholes (preferable). Federal outlays peaked at 25.2 percent of GDP in 2009 before dipping to 24.1 percent in the following two years. That gap is unsustainable and will have to be plugged with both spending cuts and revenue increases that ensnare the middle class.

No. 3: “Forward” is really backward.

The Obama campaign adopted “Forward” as its slogan for the 2012 election and features it prominently at events. As a rallying cry, it’s not much better than backward.

“Forward” was a favorite term of Marxists. Think Lenin’s “Spring Forward” and Mao’s “Great Leap Forward.” When Lenin started his own underground newspaper in 1905, he called it Vperyod (Forward). “Forward” is still popular nomenclature for socialist publications.

Someone on Team Obama either doesn’t know history or has a warped sense of humor. If the president’s advisers were looking to counter the accusation that Obama is a socialist, invoking Lenin was a bad choice.

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