The Shining City Upon a Hill

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  • Copier Addict
    Aging Tech

    Site Contributor
    10,000+ Posts
    • Jul 2013
    • 14430

    #12601
    Re: The Shining City Upon a Hill

    Originally posted by bsm2
    Wow the Moscow press again Slimwim

    Try and post something positive if you can in this thread.
    There's nothing positive in the right wing news cycles. Only fear and anger.

    Comment

    • Phil B.
      Field Supervisor

      10,000+ Posts
      • Jul 2016
      • 22798

      #12602
      Re: The Shining City Upon a Hill

      Does This Explain NYC's Migrant Crisis? Officials Report Record-Crushing Stats at Canada's Border

      Sent from my SM-G990U using Tapatalk

      Comment

      • bsm2
        IT Manager

        25,000+ Posts
        • Feb 2008
        • 29509

        #12603
        Re: The Shining City Upon a Hill

        Originally posted by Phil B.
        Oh No Canada doesn't have a Wall

        I sure hope it keeps you awake at night

        Comment

        • Phil B.
          Field Supervisor

          10,000+ Posts
          • Jul 2016
          • 22798

          #12604
          Re: The Shining City Upon a Hill

          Top Biden official unable to spin her way out of contradiction exposed by CNN host on classified docs scandal - TheBlaze

          Sent from my SM-G990U using Tapatalk

          Comment

          • slimslob
            Retired

            Site Contributor
            25,000+ Posts
            • May 2013
            • 36994

            #12605
            Re: The Shining City Upon a Hill

            Originally posted by Phil B.
            I remember a number of years ago Border Agents caught a terrorist trying to enter from Canada.

            Thanks, now I can delete that Blaze email.

            Comment

            • Phil B.
              Field Supervisor

              10,000+ Posts
              • Jul 2016
              • 22798

              #12606
              Re: The Shining City Upon a Hill

              Top Biden official unable to spin her way out of contradiction exposed by CNN host on classified docs scandal - TheBlaze

              Sent from my SM-G990U using Tapatalk

              Comment

              • slimslob
                Retired

                Site Contributor
                25,000+ Posts
                • May 2013
                • 36994

                #12607
                Re: The Shining City Upon a Hill

                Horowitz: Will red states allow Biden’s HUD to impose racial quotas on neighborhoods? - TheBlaze

                Comment

                • bsm2
                  IT Manager

                  25,000+ Posts
                  • Feb 2008
                  • 29509

                  #12608
                  Re: The Shining City Upon a Hill

                  Biden FBI search: No classified documents found at president's beach house, lawyer says

                  Comment

                  • Phil B.
                    Field Supervisor

                    10,000+ Posts
                    • Jul 2016
                    • 22798

                    #12609
                    Re: The Shining City Upon a Hill

                    Originally posted by bsm2
                    Biden FBI search: No classified documents found at president's beach house, lawyer says
                    Lawyer says. On a Scheduled visit.
                    Why 64 days from when they found the 1st batch..to finally opening up AFTER the election cycle?
                    Hmmm...

                    Sent from my SM-G990U using Tapatalk

                    Comment

                    • Phil B.
                      Field Supervisor

                      10,000+ Posts
                      • Jul 2016
                      • 22798

                      #12610
                      Re: The Shining City Upon a Hill

                      National Archives claims it was not allowed to announce Biden classified doc discovery: GOP' Comer | Just The News

                      Sent from my SM-G990U using Tapatalk

                      Comment

                      • Phil B.
                        Field Supervisor

                        10,000+ Posts
                        • Jul 2016
                        • 22798

                        #12611
                        Re: The Shining City Upon a Hill

                        Director of Iranian Americans for Liberty says Ilhan Omar shouldn't be on foreign affairs committee | Just The News

                        Sent from my SM-G990U using Tapatalk

                        Comment

                        • Phil B.
                          Field Supervisor

                          10,000+ Posts
                          • Jul 2016
                          • 22798

                          #12612
                          Re: The Shining City Upon a Hill

                          White House Accused of 'Dishonesty and Evasiveness' as Biden Physical Is Delayed Yet Again

                          Sent from my SM-G990U using Tapatalk

                          Comment

                          • bsm2
                            IT Manager

                            25,000+ Posts
                            • Feb 2008
                            • 29509

                            #12613
                            Re: The Shining City Upon a Hill

                            Trump’s Corporate Tax Cut Is Not Trickling Down
                            Business investment is slowing, despite lofty promises, and worker bonuses were a mirage.
                            President Donald Trump and Republicans in Congress cut the corporate tax rate from 35 percent to 21 percent via the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017 (TCJA). At the time, the Trump administration claimed that its corporate tax cuts would increase the average household income in the United States by $4,000. But two years later, there is little indication that the tax cut is even beginning to trickle down in the ways its proponents claimed.


                            The Trump administration claimed its corporate tax cuts would translate into a $4,000 raise for the average household
                            In selling the large corporate tax cut to Congress and a skeptical American public, the Trump administration claimed that corporate tax cuts would ultimately translate into higher wages for workers. The tax cuts would trickle down to workers through a multistep process. First, slashing the corporate tax rate would increase corporations’ after-tax returns on investment, inducing them to massively boost spending on investments such as factories, equipment, and research and development. This investment boom would give the average worker more and better capital to work with, substantially increasing the overall productivity of U.S. workers. In other words, they would be able to produce more goods and services with every hour worked. And finally, U.S. workers would capture the benefits of their increased productivity by successfully bargaining for higher wages.


                            According to President Trump’s Council of Economic Advisers (CEA), this process would “in the medium term boost the average U.S. household income annually in current dollars by at least $4,000, conservatively.” CEA’s “optimistic” estimate of the average household’s raise was $9,000. Then-CEA Chairman Kevin Hassett claimed that it would take “three to five years” for these massive trickle-down effects to materialize. A number of critics noted that the Trump administration’s claims were unlikely to pan out, in part because they hinged on the same supply-side economics that decades of tax cuts for the wealthy have consistently discredited.


                            These critics emphasized a number of flaws with the CEA’s theory of the case. First, corporations were holding large amounts of cash. Second, they were able to access capital very cheaply with interest rates at historic lows for almost a decade. Third, the effective tax rates on U.S. corporate investment, especially debt-financed investment, were already quite low, indicating that the cost of capital—let alone the portion attributable to taxes—was hardly holding back corporate investment. The critics noted that greater corporate market power meant that corporate profits consisted largely of economic rents, not marginal returns on investment. Therefore, a new corporate tax cut would, even if effective, likely be passed onto shareholders rather than being reinvested by the firms receiving the tax cut. Critics emphasized further that even if the tax cuts sparked an investment boom that increased productivity, it would be far from clear whether workers would be able to capture the gains, given the power imbalances between U.S. workers and employers.


                            The promised boom in business investment never happened
                            In the year following the tax cut, business investment increased—but not by nearly as much as the tax cut proponents’ predictions would have implied. Furthermore, a study by the International Monetary Fund (IMF) concluded that the relatively healthy business investment in 2018 was driven by strong aggregate demand in the economy—not the supply-side factors that tax cut proponents used to justify the tax cut. In other words, the increase in business investment from the relatively weak 2015-2016 period seems like another example of an economic indicator returning to more-normal levels.


                            Worse, business investment has slowed more recently. The most recent data show that private nonresidential investment actually declined in the second quarter of 2019, contributing to an overall slowdown in growth. Federal Reserve Chairman Jay Powell pointed to the “continued softness” expected in business investment and declining output in manufacturing sector as reasons for the Fed’s recent rate cut. Measures of the investments that companies are planning have also declined. As analysts at the nonpartisan Tax Policy Center wrote recently, “This slowdown in business purchases of plant and equipment contrasts sharply with President Trump’s rosy forecast of a long-term investment boom that would lead to annual wage increases of $4,000 or more.” Moreover, investment in housing has declined every quarter since the passage of the tax legislation.


                            Instead of substantially increasing investment, the windfall businesses received largely went to paying off wealthy investors. One analysis of Fortune 500 companies found that just 20 percent of increased cashflow in 2018 was spent on increasing capital expenditures or research and development. The remaining 80 percent of cashflow went to investors through buybacks, dividends, or other asset planning adjustments. The vast majority of corporate stocks are held by the wealthy, including foreign investors, and thus they are the ultimate beneficiaries of the windfall corporate tax cuts.


                            To be sure, President Trump’s erratic pronouncements on tariffs have clearly created considerable uncertainty for businesses, leading many to hold back on investments. At this point, it is not possible to disentangle the negative effects of Trump’s misbegotten trade war from his tax policies. What we do know, however, is that nearly two years after the tax bill passed, the investment boom that was supposed to justify the corporate tax cuts—and even pay for those tax cuts over the long run—simply has not happened.

                            Corporate revenue has dropped precipitously since Trump’s tax cut
                            While the promised benefits of Trump’s corporate tax cuts have yet to materialize, the costs can be seen dramatically in the data on corporate tax revenue. As a result, since the law passed in December 2017, revenues from corporate taxes have fallen by more than 40 percent, contributing to the largest year-over-year drop in corporate tax revenue that we have seen outside of a recession. This has added even more to deficits than experts had previously predicted. The U.S. Treasury reported that from fiscal year 2017 to FY 2018, the federal budget deficit increased by $113 billion while corporate tax receipts fell by about $90 billion, which would account for nearly 80 percent of the deficit increase. Though the Trump administration and the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) projected corporate revenues to bounce back somewhat in FY 2019, there is no sign yet that that is happening, with 11 of 12 months having already been reported for FY 2019.

                            Perverse incentives in the TCJA may be encouraging investment overseas rather than in the United States
                            While cutting corporate tax rates, the 2017 tax law also overhauled the tax rules for U.S. companies’ overseas profits. In fact, one of the claimed selling points of the TCJA was that the legislation would allow U.S. firms to access profits that had been “trapped” overseas by the old international tax system, enabling them to invest more in the United States. In reality, these profits were never really trapped overseas, and past experience had demonstrated that extending special low tax rates to past overseas profits would not boost jobs or investment in the United States.


                            Worse, as the TCJA was being rushed through Congress, critics warned that some of the key international tax provisions would actually create new incentives for U.S. companies to invest overseas instead of in the United States. The law replaced the old international tax system (which was undoubtedly highly flawed) with a new regime that generally exempts the overseas profits of American firms from U.S. tax, thereby favoring them relative to domestic profits. The law also includes two provisions that are intended to prevent U.S. companies from artificially reporting their profits overseas to avoid U.S. tax and encourage them to locate intangible assets (such as patents or copyrights) in the United States. But under these two provisions—known as GILTI and FDII, respectively—firms can reduce their tax liability by locating more tangible assets (factories, equipment) overseas relative to the United States. For this reason, a group of leading tax scholars warned that the design of the GILTI regime “pushes U.S. firms in the direction of locating real assets (and accompanying jobs) overseas rather than domestically.” The CBO echoed this concern, noting that the two key international tax provisions of the TCJA “may increase corporations’ incentive to locate tangible assets abroad.”


                            It is still early, but a new study finds evidence that the TCJA is producing more investment overseas than in the United States. The study found that since the passage of the TCJA, the multinational firms that had been subject to high “repatriation costs”—in other words, the very firms that proponents claimed would be able to tap their “trapped cash” to invest in the United States—have increased their investment overseas rather than in the United States. Pointing to the incentives created by the GILTI and FDII provisions, the authors conclude that these early results “[conflict] with a stated goal of the TCJA to spur domestic economic growth.” If the tax law is incenting U.S. firms to locate more tangible assets overseas instead of in the United States, it would put U.S. workers at a further disadvantage.
                            Last edited by bsm2; 02-02-2023, 11:01 AM.

                            Comment

                            • bsm2
                              IT Manager

                              25,000+ Posts
                              • Feb 2008
                              • 29509

                              #12614
                              Re: The Shining City Upon a Hill

                              Trump’s Corporate Tax Cut Is Not Trickling Down
                              Business investment is slowing, despite lofty promises, and worker bonuses were a mirage.

                              The ballyhooed tax cut bonuses were a mirage

                              Finally, recent data show that the tax bill did not lead to a meaningful increase in worker bonuses, debunking the forceful public relations campaign waged by the proponents of the tax cuts and the corporations receiving them.


                              Immediately following Trump’s tax cut, corporations began announcing bonuses attributed to the TCJA. But new data show that this may have been nothing more than tax-motivated timing shifts. This is because corporations were able to take deductions on bonuses that they gave out in 2017 and early 2018 against the higher tax rate, making them more valuable than if they had handed the bonuses out later in the year. This created an incentive for corporations to shift up any bonuses that they planned to give out later. Now that this method of tax planning is no longer available, employers have reduced the value of bonuses, which have now fallen lower than their pre-TCJA levels—showing that the much-hyped benefit for workers was illusory.


                              Conclusion
                              While the effects of a very large tax overhaul will take years to fully develop and analyze, the evidence from the first two years suggests that corporate tax cuts are draining revenue from the U.S. Treasury while doing little that would ultimately benefit U.S. workers. Instead of trickling down to workers, the 2017 tax cuts have largely served to line the pockets of already wealthy investors—further increasing inequality—with little to show for it.

                              Comment

                              • BBM
                                Senior Tech

                                500+ Posts
                                • Dec 2020
                                • 846

                                #12615
                                Re: The Shining City Upon a Hill

                                The ballyhooed tax cut bonuses were a mirage

                                Is Bidens 7% inflation a mirage

                                Comment

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