'Maurile Tremblay said:
'Clifford said:
You might have heard this repeated about ten billion times the last election cycle. His point is that the rich (IE the 1%) can not possibly spend as much as the 1,000 median income people their wages would support. So by giving tax breaks to the rich and not to the middle class, they are placing spendable money in the wrong hands, and not creating near as much demand as there would be with a moderately well-off middle class.
I think it would take a lot of work to establish that. It's not obvious that "spendable money" ends up in different places depending on the progressiveness of tax policies. Spendable money includes money lent and borrowed; it doesn't have to come from directly from the spender's savings account.
So the government is essentially misplacing its bet, thinking that by giving more money to the rich, they will use those extra funds to create new jobs via hiring.
Is "giving more money to the rich" another way of saying "taking less money from the rich"?
Anyone who knows anything about business knows that having the money to hire somoene is not a reason a job gets created. His point is that jobs are only created by demand.
Jobs are created by businesses with the capital (sometimes borrowed) to create them, and a business plan to support them. It takes both capital and demand. Both are relevant to unemployment rates, but I don't think either one is the main limiting factor on employment. That's a pretty complicated subject, though; and again, I think it would take a lot of work to convincingly make the guy's point.
So if the government taxed the rich more, and used those funds to create tax breaks for the middle class that allowed them to buy more, the rich would actually get a lot richer via increased demand for the products and services they sell, and they would be FORCED to hire more people in order to meet the increased demand.
This seems very unlikely. If you take $10 from a rich dude and give it to a poor dude, and the poor dude uses it to buy $10 worth of stuff from the rich dude, the rich dude did not "get a lot richer via increased demand." He got poorer. He got the $10 back, but he increased his cost of goods sold, so he lost overall.In general, you cannot make somebody richer by taking money from him and giving it to somebody else.
Not really interested in debating sematics. The jist of what the guy said was right on, and its coming from someone with tons more knowledge of this subject than either you or I will likely ever have.His point is that
1) Lower taxes on the wealthy does not create jobs (he has a slide on the past ten years that convincingly makes this point. The evidence is right there if you choose to look at it and accept it)
2)Businesses create jobs to meet demand. Therefore demand is the true job creator, and business owners are merely a step in between the creation of the need and the creation of the job.
3) Putting money in the hands of more people, rather than putting money in the hands of far fewer people, creates more demand and therefore more jobs.
At least that is what I got from it. If you got something else that's fine.
You're correct on the demand side.
The problem with your argument is that1....who is going to supply the capital to meet the demand and provide jobs? The answer is.....the rich. It's not cheap to start businesses or expand business, so
you can't credibly argue that the middle class will provide the capital2. So you're only looking at the issue from one side. Job creation comes from the rich and the middle/lower classes.
So you have to give the rich incentives to invest an provide capital to grow/start businesses to meet an increased demand.
3
So you can't argue point #1 IN ISOLATION. Just saying that lower taxes doesn't create jobs isn't entirely true......just as saying lower taxes on the wealthy will automatically create jobs isn't entirely true either. It just isn't that simple. Job creation is a function of a lot of variables, tax policy being one of them. Regulatory enviroment is another. Demand, and so on.
I believe
your point #24 should say "Business create jobs to meet demand if the jobs added will add long term extra value to the bottom line". Businesses aren't going to hire even if demand increases if the increased expense of hiring outweighs processing the extra demand. Also, companies need to see an increase in long term demand in order to believe that hiring will help their bottom line. If demand is just a short term fix (ie like a transfer payment stimulus), companies will likely just make their current employees work harder or just hire seasonal/temporary workers to meet the short term demand.
Regarding point #3, I won't disagree that putting more money in hands of more people will increase demand.
The issue is.....how do you do it?5 I would like our government to have pro growth policies so that we increase the number of wealthy people.....have more people go from middle class to rich, or lower to middle class. I understand that we have wealth inequality in this country, and it's never going to change....the rich are going to get richer. IMO, it's not the government's responsibility to spread wealth around for the sake of fairness.
You keep taxing the successful at alarming rates, then you will give people less incentive to become successful.6 And that's wrong.