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Wednesday, March 04, 2009
Donald Lambro :: Townhall.com Columnist
Tax Hikes Threaten Main Street
by Donald Lambro
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WASHINGTON -- President Obama's big-spending 2010 budget is filled with tax provisions that will stunt economic growth, job creation and new-business formation.

It's bad enough that his soak-the-rich tax increases will have a negative impact on ordinary workers, but worst of all, he'll raise them when the U.S. economy will still be in a recession or in the difficult process of attempting to climb out of one.

He intends to keep all of the Bush tax cuts except the two top tax rates, which he will let expire at the end of 2010, one year after the White House says the economy will have shrunk by at least 1.2 percent and likely a lot more. This means that coming out of a recessionary 2009, when the Federal Reserve forecasts unemployment will shoot to 9 percent or more, Obama will be raising taxes on investors and small businesses -- the very people who create jobs.

This will be the bleak result of letting the two top income tax rates rise in January 2011: from 33 percent to 36 percent and from 35 percent to 39.6 percent, or more than 40 percent when state taxes are added. But how does this impact ordinary Americans?

"According to Internal Revenue Service data, half of all business income is taxed at individual rather than corporate tax rates, and about two-thirds of all flow-through business income is earned by small-business owners with annual incomes exceeding $200,000," said economic adviser Cesar Conda.

"The bottom line: Up to one-third of all business income is taxed at the two marginal rates Obama wants to raise," Conda told his business clients.

With the unemployment rate at 7.6 percent, the highest in 16 years, this is no time to raise taxes on small businesses, the engine of job growth in the country. Or even telegraphing that he intends to do this at this end of the year.

"President Obama may propose tax hikes not take effect until 2011, but the fact is they already are depressing economic activity in the middle of the recession," said Alison Acosta Fraser, director of the Heritage Foundation's Roe Institute for Economic Policy Studies.

"Facing higher future taxes, businesses, investors and savers reduce their activities today," she said in a recent study.

But Obama's demands for more tax revenue don't stop there. He wants a 2 percent to 4 percent payroll tax surcharge on taxpayers earning more than $250,000 to boost Social Security surpluses (which the government spends). And he wants to restrict the itemized tax deductions for this same group of taxpayers, which would push their income tax rate up by another 7 points.

Then there are Obama's rosy economic-growth projections next year that have raised eyebrows among many economists who think we are in for a period of slow growth coming out of this recession, especially if his draconian tax hikes are enacted. Continued...

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About The Author

Donald Lambro is chief political correspondent for The Washington Times.

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Reagan raised taxes in a worse situation
Reagan raised taxes in the US in 1983 when the unemployment rate was over 9%. This included a hike in the tax on gasoline. Again in 1984 he raised taxes on businesses (50 billion over 3 years) when the unemployment rate was higher than now. In 1986 when the unemployment rate was similar to now, Reagan signed into law a change in the tax laws that took away the tax deduction for individual for interest on credit cards. This also phased out the same deduction for businesses.

By the way several people seem to think that small businesses earning over 250K will have an increase in tax relating to the employee payroll. However, this I believe the Obama plan would increase the tax only against taxable income which is determined after expenses are deducted. Much depends on the status of a business, ie if it is a C or S corporation, partnership or LLC. For most corporations, LLC, etc. I believe employee salaries are treated as expenses and are not taxable under the Obama proposed plan.

Where Does Main St. Get Money?
Right, from those who aren't there. As noted, 66% of small businesses, your "Main Street" make over $250k a year, money that needs to be held back to pay taxes as they can't tie it up in other assets anymore, like expanding product lines or more employees. They aren't "Main Street" then. So where do you collect your salary to spend money on an Internet to spew uneducated junk at TH? That's right, not Main St. as defined by you guys. If they have less, you have less. Simple as that.
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