Friday, February 27, 2009

Works For Me

NYT:
The budget that President Obama proposed on Thursday is nothing less than an attempt to end a three-decade era of economic policy dominated by the ideas of Ronald Reagan and his supporters.
/thunderous applause
/sigh of relief
/unbridled cheers
/tears of joy

Why?
The history of the United States economy over the last 70 years can be roughly divided into two periods: the decades immediately after World War II, when inequality plummeted, and the past three decades, when global economic forces and government policies caused it to soar. Mr. Obama is setting out to begin a third period that looks more like the first than the second.

That agenda starts with taxes. Over the last three decades, the pretax incomes of the wealthiest households have risen far more than they have for other households, while the tax rates for top earners have fallen more than they have for others, according to the Congressional Budget Office.

As a result, the average post-tax income of the top 1 percent of households has jumped by roughly $1 million since 1979, adjusted for inflation, to $1.4 million. Pay for most families has risen only slightly faster than inflation.

Before becoming Mr. Obama’s top economic adviser, Lawrence H. Summers liked to tell a hypothetical story to distill the trend. The increase in inequality, Mr. Summers would say, meant that each family in the bottom 80 percent of the income distribution was effectively sending a $10,000 check, every year, to the top 1 percent of earners.
That last three decades started with Ronald Reagan, who, if you take a look at this chart, put us on the course to our current debacle.

I look forward to the Newties and Grovers and Rushes of the world and their respective armies of dimwitted acolytes argue against this budget (with its tax cuts for middle-to-low income families) in an environment where millions of jobs, houses, and dollars in retirement savings are being lost.

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