Don’t Panic About Trump’s Iran Strategy Just Yet
If You Missed Last Night's NBA Finals Game, You Missed Absolute Cinema
The Truth Is Simple: Democrats Don’t Care About Anything but Gaining Power
Here Is Leftist Government
The 60 Minutes Controversy
The War No One Else Is Fighting
Trump Goes to the NBA Finals — Look Who Attacked Him
Who'll Stop the Fraud?
A Villainous Blueprint for Managed Poverty
Donald Trump Is Personally Making Antitrust Sane Again
When Abortion Has a Face
Washington's Debt Problem Is Every Investor's Problem
The GOP's Quiet Rebellion: What It Means for Trump, Congress and the Supreme...
Nine Convicted in Ohio Drug Ring That Mixed Fentanyl Trafficking With $4.5M COVID-19...
Democrat Calls Republicans Fascists, Wishes He Could 'Run Over' Trump at Congressional Bas...
Tipsheet

The Meaning of "Trickle Down" Economics

The Meaning of "Trickle Down" Economics
This Los Angeles Times news story discusses the ways that LA's "wealthy" have turned frugal in the wake of the recession.

What's most interesting, though, is the discussion of the impact on the city's less-than-wealthy retailers and others.  A variety of service providers are offering their expertise at reduced rates and otherwise struggling: 
Advertisement


Some spending cutbacks are the sort only a multimillionaire could appreciate, like canceling one of multiple private club memberships or sharing a private jet with another family. But the malaise has also hit middle-income Westsiders who in flush times helped keep cash registers ringing. . . . 

The recession's effects are rippling out to a wide range of entrepreneurs.

Hello?  That's what happens when "the wealthy" are suffering (even relatively) economically -- and when they become so overtaxed that they start cutting back on the luxuries that helped keep less affluent people in  business.

Remember all the derision of the concept of "trickle down" economics in the '80's?  Well, it looks like even the LA Times is part of the "trickle down" economist crowd now.

Don't look for any help from President Obama in the form of the tax repeal that the first President Bush secured for struggling yacht builders.  Don't forget that for Obama, taxes aren't just about raising revenue -- they're also about social levelling, otherwise known as "fairness."



Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement