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Friday, July 11, 2008
Donald Lambro :: Townhall.com Columnist
For Business, Shortchange Is More Like It
by Donald Lambro
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Will the Dems' health care Christmas Present to America be an improvement or detriment to our health care system?


WASHINGTON -- Barack Obama likes to use the word "investment" in his campaign speech on getting the U.S. economy growing again, but it means something very different for him than it does for most people.

To the average American, making an investment means putting one's money into an asset or business enterprise that will return a dividend or interest payment or capital gain -- something that will grow in value over time.

The lifeblood of the American economy and the source of all jobs and growth is capital -- investment capital -- that comes from people who are both workers and investors. Each benefits from the other. But in Obama's speeches, "investment" is a euphemism for government spending -- and it plays an all too prominent role in his platform. As for the word "capital" -- without which there can be no investment to build or expand businesses and create jobs -- that doesn't turn up at all in his economic speeches. More on that later.

The freshman senator from Illinois told an audience in St. Louis, Mo., that "the answer to our fiscal problems is not to shortchange investments that will help our families get ahead -- investments that are vital to our long-term growth as a nation."

But what Obama calls "investments" sound like government giveaways -- taking money from some Americans to give to others -- otherwise known as income redistribution. He's planning a lot of giveaways. Here are four of them:

-- Giveaway No. 1: "A second stimulus package that provides energy-rebate checks for working families ..."

-- Giveaway No. 2: "Establish a fund in the Treasury to help (subprime mortgage) families avoid foreclosure."

-- Giveaway No. 3: "Increased assistance for states that have been hard hit by the economic downturn." These are state governments that spent all their money when times were good, but face deficits when times are bad.

-- Giveaway No. 4: Fifty percent of the first $1,000 saved by "working families" earning less than $75,000 "deposit(ed) directly into your account" by the federal government.

Whatever the merits of these spending programs, they are not going to reinvigorate the economy or create any private-sector jobs. Obama talks a lot about creating jobs, but his speech is disturbingly hostile to wealthy people, who do the most investing. He also harbors no fondness for the notion of using tax incentives to boost capital investment -- i.e., venture capital and risk capital -- to grow the economy, which in turn will create more jobs.

Job creation, to Obama, is one vast public-works project in which a bunch of government bureaucrats will do the "investing" with the tax dollars he expects will come flowing into federal coffers when he raises tax rates on upper-income workers -- including capital-gains taxes on investors (which always results in less revenue, not more).

"One place where that investment would make an enormous difference is in a renewable-energy policy that ... builds a green economy that could create up to 5 million well-paying jobs," he asserted during a speech in Raleigh, N.C., last month.

Who will decide where those tax dollars are invested to create these jobs? Well, the same bureaucrats who are pouring billions into schemes such as corn-based ethanol, which has helped to drive up the price of just about everything in the food chain.

But Obama has other creative ways that this increased spending can create jobs: "We can also create millions of new jobs by rebuilding our schools, roads, bridges and other critical infrastructure that needs repair," he told the good people of North Carolina. Well, creating jobs through public-works spending -- er, I mean investing -- is hardly a novel idea, nor is it "change you can believe in." It has been tried many times before but without much success. We cannot spend our way to prosperity. Then there is Obama's strange enmity toward the word capital, which he shuns like the plague. You can't begin to talk seriously about economic growth and job creation without talking about capital formation and unleashing capital in private investment markets.

You can't have a thriving capitalist economy without capital, but Obama never mentions capitalism, either. Maybe it's because he dislikes that word, too, and even the system itself. He ridicules his presumptive presidential rival John McCain's economic-growth prescriptions, which call for keeping the tax cuts we have on the books and trimming other tax rates (like the corporate tax rate, which is the second highest in the industrialized world), to spur business expansion and hiring.

But Obama would effectively raise corporate tax rates when he says he will "shut down corporate loopholes." And he says he will raise the top income tax rate, which will slap higher tax burdens on small, often family-run businesses, engines that drive job creation in our country. In one remarkable passage in a recent speech, Obama says McCain "trusts that prosperity will trickle down from corporations and the wealthiest few to everyone else. I believe it's the hard work of middle-class Americans that fuels this nation's prosperity."

But 150 million workers have jobs because businesses large and small were started with investments and savings. His frequent use of that old labor-union smear term "trickle down" to discredit capitalism is a cheap shot that does not sound like someone who represents real change.

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About The Author

Donald Lambro is chief political correspondent for The Washington Times.

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Giveaway No. 3:
"Increased assistance for states that have been hard hit by the economic downturn."

Not (at all) coincidentally, these are all states that are wholly owned and operated by liberal democrats. It is the peculiar hallmark of their administrations.

Obama will renege on his promises
If Obama does as he promises, he will l be a one time president and the Democrats will lose the congress.

What Obama is actually going to have to do is raise GDP, revenue being a constant 19.6% of GDP regardless of tax rate. If he fails here, the dollar and American power will plummet.

He can raise GDP by spending , and pay for it by borrowing or the printing press. Either would accelerate inflation. But then the world economy might collapse.

The safe way to promote rapidly increasing GDP is the permanent demise of the estate and gift taxes, followed in reducing effectiveness by a reduction in the corporate, capital gains, and dividend tax rates.

The death tax saps incentive. Ending the death tax would: (1) lessen the diversion of taxable into nontaxable assets - from funding state and federal governments into funding private governments; (2) dampen the diversion of investment capital to insurance and spendthrift spending and prevent the selling of productive assets as bargain prices to pay taxes; and (4) end the diversion of men from their highly productive desk chairs to the rocking chair; in each instance thereby exponentially increasing jobs, GDP, and tax revenues.

Much the same considerations support reduction in corporate, capital gains, and dividend taxes. Zeroing or reducing corporate taxes to 15% would greatly expand investment and exponentially increase American jobs, GDP, and tax revenues. Ditto capital gains and dividends.

Tax big business
Majority of the people don't understand that when politicians sat they are going to increase taxes on "oil companies" or "big business" or any other specific group, it just gets passed along right back to the consumer as increased prices.

They don't understand that when a politician promises the "government" will give them something, like universal healthcare or whatever, they think "government" will just print more money to pay for it if the extra taxes on the "rich" aren't enough.

I fail to understand how so many people can fall for the, "We need to increase taxes" mantra. Like, oh, yea, please take more of the money I have earned by working my butt off and give it to someone, or some thing, that you think can use it better than me. And, gee, if that someone or some thing just happens to help you get re-elected so you can do it again, gee, I think that's just terrific.

Notice that most of those politicians who want to raise taxes are multi millionaires who look at a few thousand bucks as pocket change. After all, they deal with billions and trillions every day.

Get a clue Obama
do you believe everything this person says? Then tell me; Obama says he is going to redistribute the tax breaks in place and then will make the rich pay more and the working poor pay less; well have you ever had the government give you anything and then take it back and give you more? Neither have I. Once our tax breaks are gone, they will never return.

Those who believe in Obama are only baking their own fallen cake, nothing he says can you believe in; nothing he does can you believe in; he talks down to people of his own color and down to people not of his color; so what can or do you really believe?

Joy

When Obama talks about
soaking the rich to provide programs for the middleclass and the poor, most people never think that there will be a cost for them at all at any time. What they don't know is that the rich (1%) already pay most of the taxes and if crippled or discouraged in investing and buying, the rest of the country suffers as businesses do not grow or are not created. Jobs are lost and the standard of living goes down.

Remember when the yachting industry was taxed. Who suffered? The yacht makers lost out as the rich refused to buy. Let that be a lesson.

MRC
The fact that you don't even know how to spell fannie mae is all I need to know about what you "know" about the subject.

Vengence
Note the word! That is the spirit of this movement.

By the way, the 'investments' in renewable energy and other goodies will be made by people who haven't had to make an investment - in the real sense of the word - in their entire lives. This is such a dangerous combination of envy and hubris it is breathtaking.

And when many take their hard-earned money and leave it uninvested, what will the envious do then? Confiscate it?

take away===give it away
you are darned right obama will take it away from some and give it to others. we will do what is being done now, only we will rearrange the players. fannie may is in the process of almost a sure bail out by our government . this is taking money away from someone and redistributing it to someone else, or am i wrong. the time is very near when the fed government will have to take a whole bumch of money away from some people and give it to a bunch of banks and bankers to keep them afloat. will this be what you mean by inconme redistribution. dont complain because we choose to change to position of the players while playing the ame game. a person who makes
3.5 billion dollars a year can afford to give 2,0 billion of it back to the government so it can be rediastributed (i love that word)to someone who works his tali off and only make 12,000 a year with no hospitalization and the billionaire would still have enough left never to have to worrry about anything financial again. we are going to get back what your pals have given you over the last few years and redistribute it to those who desrerve it and need it more , and you can jump in the lake if you dont like it. we will do it and i hope we do it with a vengence.

Don't forget
when these tax hikes hit the rich, not only will jobs be slashed, but the rich will also increase the cost of the goods and services they provide to make up for it. The rich won't get any poorer but we citizens sure will! What an incredibly idiotic solution! Is that the best you libs can offer?

Good Points

They are however, never going to be seen by the people who need to see them.
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