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Those opposed to a potential 15 percent across-the-board tax cut emanating from the camp of Republican Presidential candidate Bob Dole say he should stick with balancing the budget. Then they cite the Reagan tax cuts as evidence that tax cuts are budget busters. But the Reagan tax cuts had nothing to do with the increase in federal budget deficits during the 1980s, many economists contend.
While real growth averaged 3.9 percent per year in the 1982-89 period, it has crept at a snail's pace in the 1990s -- just 1.6 percent per year. The American people were better off during the low-tax l980s than they are in the high-tax 1990s.
Although the budget deficit has been reduced in the 1990s, increasing real incomes is vastly more important. And if a future Dole tax cut stimulates the economy, as tax cuts almost always do, the nation can have deficit reduction coupled with a renewed increase in household wealth. Source: Bruce Bartlett (National Center for Policy Analysis), "Devious Designs of the Tax Cut Naysayers," Washington Times, May 27, 1996. |
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