[« I don't care about the Olympics....] [Thought for the Day: »]
08/10/2004: In his NYT column today....
economist Paul Krugman makes an interesting point:
[M]any apologists have returned to that old standby: the claim that presidents don't control the economy. But that's not what the administration said when selling its tax policies. Last year's tax cut was officially named the Jobs and Growth Tax Relief Reconciliation Act of 2003 - and administration economists provided a glowing projection of the job growth that would follow the bill's passage. That projection has, needless to say, proved to be wildly overoptimistic.
What we've just seen is as clear a test of trickledown economics as we're ever likely to get. Twice, in 2001 and in 2003, the administration insisted that a tax cut heavily tilted toward the affluent was just what the economy needed. Officials brushed aside pleas to give relief instead to lower- and middle-income families, who would be more likely to spend the money, and to cash-strapped state and local governments. Given the actual results - huge deficits, but minimal job growth - don't you wish the administration had listened to that advice?
Len on 08.10.04 @ 01:08 PM CST
Replies: 1 comment
on Tuesday, August 10th, 2004 at 3:14 PM CST, gooseneck said
Yep.