Morning Bell: At the Mercy of the Obama Tax Hikes
Total employment in the United States economy now stands at 130.2 million. This is 7.6 million jobs short of where the President promised the economy would be by December 2010 if Congress adopted his economic policies. 9.6% unemployment. A 7.6 million jobs gap. Unemployment is actually higher now than when the recession ended in June. If this is not the definition of failure, then what is?
By contrast, when the 1980s recession ended in December 1982, unemployment stood at 10.8%. Fifteen months into President Ronald Reagan’s economic recovery, and unemployment had already fallen three full points to 7.8%. Why was the Reagan recovery such a success? And why is the Obama recovery such a failure? Well, for starters, President Reagan did not saddle our children with a brand new $1 trillion entitlement. But more urgently, President Reagan also did not threaten the U.S. economy with the largest tax hike in American history.
There still is time for Congress to act to prevent the Obama tax hikes. Tax hikes that include higher rates on individual income, capital gains and dividends. No Americans will escape the damage from the Obama tax hikes including: 1) Destroying an average of 693,000 jobs every year through 2020; 2) Draining $726 billion from disposable income, $38 billion from personal savings and $33 billion from business investments; 3) costing the average non-farm small-business owner $3,500 more in taxes, and much, much more.
But the economic harms from the Obama tax hike are already being felt. The Washington Post reports today that because of Congress’ failure to take action on the tax hikes before the November election, millions of businesses will have trouble issuing everyone’s paycheck this January. The Post reports that if no action is taken, “millions of low- and middle-income taxpayers would see significant tax increases.” Former president of the American Payroll Association Dennis Danilewicz told the Post: “People are starting to say, ‘What are we going to do?’ Everyone is kind of at Congress’ mercy.”
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