cebalrai
Literotica Guru
- Joined
- Feb 28, 2003
- Posts
- 3,343
All the Republican house can manage is $1.2 trillion in deficit reduction, which turned into $900 billion when economists looked at the plan. No tax hikes, just some spending cuts that are too small to deal with the problem. Apparently Bohener's weeks of talking about supporting $800 billion in revenue increases was all a huge waste of time since the house wont support 50 cents of increases.
Meanwhile the plan in the Democratic Senate has $2.7 trillion in deficit reduction but it includes closing tax loopholes. Standard and Poor's is considering downgrading the US credit rating (a 50-50 chance they say) if there isn't a credible solution to the debt found. They suggest passing a $4 trillion agreement.
Here's how we can avoid default, slash the deficit deeply to reach that $4 trillion mark, and keep out AAA credit rating, all without raising marginal tax rates:
1) Start with the Senate plan. That's 2.7 trillion.
2) Roll back the Bush tax cuts on the top 2% of Americans. That's $890 billion according to the CBO.
3) That leaves us $310 billion, or $31 billion per year. This is a very doable figure that can be achieved by smaller cuts and/or revenue increases. Also, it's actually less than $310 billion, because if we're making deficit cuts this deep there will be far less interest to be added in. Roll back the Bush tax cuts on the top 2.5% richest, *poof*, solved.
http://news.yahoo.com/deal-no-deal-us-downgrade-looking-likely-215151805.html
http://www.cbo.gov/ftpdocs/112xx/doc11280/frontmatter.shtml
Meanwhile the plan in the Democratic Senate has $2.7 trillion in deficit reduction but it includes closing tax loopholes. Standard and Poor's is considering downgrading the US credit rating (a 50-50 chance they say) if there isn't a credible solution to the debt found. They suggest passing a $4 trillion agreement.
Here's how we can avoid default, slash the deficit deeply to reach that $4 trillion mark, and keep out AAA credit rating, all without raising marginal tax rates:
1) Start with the Senate plan. That's 2.7 trillion.
2) Roll back the Bush tax cuts on the top 2% of Americans. That's $890 billion according to the CBO.
3) That leaves us $310 billion, or $31 billion per year. This is a very doable figure that can be achieved by smaller cuts and/or revenue increases. Also, it's actually less than $310 billion, because if we're making deficit cuts this deep there will be far less interest to be added in. Roll back the Bush tax cuts on the top 2.5% richest, *poof*, solved.
http://news.yahoo.com/deal-no-deal-us-downgrade-looking-likely-215151805.html
http://www.cbo.gov/ftpdocs/112xx/doc11280/frontmatter.shtml
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