AnimusRex
Posts: 2165
Joined: 5/13/2006 Status: offline
|
Cutting taxes and increasing spending actually have a similar effect; They either allow more cash to be kept in consumer hands, or increasing the amount of money circulating in the economy. During times of recession, both of these acts can stimulate the economy, encouraging people to buy more, and thus create jobs. Good, right? Not always. If the tax cuts are not matched by spending cuts, we will have to borrow to cover the deficit. So cutting taxes by a dollar is the same as increasing spending by a dollar, if you have to borrow the dollar. Everyone talks about shrinking the size of government, but no one really wants to do it. When pressed, very few politicians will actully name a program or agency that should have its budget reduced. Especially since 3 Trillion of the 3.5 trillion we spend, is spent on Medicare, Social Security, and Defense/ Homeland Security. These three divisons of the government are politically untouchable, by both parties. So Tim is right, until there is some will to cut spending, or raise taxes, or both, we will continue to have deficits. I have suggested before that there are reasonable ways to cut SS and Medicare, as well as raising taxes modestly. But we have to get over the thinking that there is somehow a painless easy way to do it.
|