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Thursday, May 06, 2004
Ed Feulner :: Townhall.com Columnist
Sizzle and Steak
by Ed Feulner
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Poll
Will the Dems' health care Christmas Present to America be an improvement or detriment to our health care system?


The roar of good economic news is getting louder.

Our economy expanded 4.2 percent in the first quarter of the year. That follows 4.1 percent growth in the fourth quarter, and 8.2 percent growth in the quarter before that.

Over the last three months alone, our economy created more than a half-million jobs. Business investment grew 11.4 percent. Wages and salaries jumped 4.8 percent. And according to The Wall Street Journal, economists expect growth of at least 4 percent the rest of the year.

Surprised? There?s no reason to be.

In the second quarter of 2003, President Bush signed legislation that lowered tax rates on the money entrepreneurs invest in the economy -- and those rate cuts took effect immediately. The 2003 tax bill also accelerated some of the tax cuts from the 2001 legislation -- specifically, the tax rate reductions that weren?t scheduled to take effect until this year and 2006.

This matters, because the economy doesn?t get much benefit today if tax rates are reduced in the future. That?s why the 2003 tax cuts had a bigger effect than the 2001 tax cuts. Once lower tax rates go into effect, businesses start to invest more, which means more jobs and higher wages. GDP starts to increase. Good news starts to pile on top of good news until you witness what we?re seeing today: an economic recovery.

Perpetual growth isn?t guaranteed, though. In fact, the tax cuts that have done so much to boost growth today could disappear beginning as early as 2009. This is a time bomb that could derail future growth.

Some tax cuts could expire even sooner. The child tax credit will drop from $1,000 this year to $700 next year. The standard deduction for joint filers will decrease next year, leading to the return of the marriage penalty. (The House of Representatives, at least, recently voted to extend this tax break.) That would mean a sudden tax increase for most of us. And ?bonus depreciation? will expire next January, which will mean higher taxes on new business investment.

President Bush has asked Congress to make all the cuts permanent, and the sooner the better. Because so many provisions are set to expire, many businesses are in limbo. Should they invest now, or wait to see if tax rates go up or down? By making today?s tax rates permanent, lawmakers would remove the guesswork and allow these companies to invest with confidence. Continued...

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About The Author
Dr. Edwin Feulner is president of The Heritage Foundation, a Townhall.com Gold Partner, and co-author of Getting America Right: The True Conservative Values Our Nation Needs Today .
 
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