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      Saturday, November 10, 2007

      Who wants to reform health care?

      I remember during some townhall forum where "normal people" (i.e. handpicked by Dan Rather or the like) asked questions to GOP and the Democratic candidate. This may have been in 2004. Bush said that the biggest concern for the average American small business owner was taxes. The questioner said that his biggest concern as a small business owner was health care, and what was government going to do to make it easier. I noted back then that health care is a tax policy issue, and that Bush for all his ham-fistedness had it right. Ramesh Ponnuru highlights this fact in Time.
      That's how we ended up with the health-insurance system we have now, based on employers. You get a tax break if you get your insurance through your job. If you get a raise and use it to buy your own insurance instead, you have to pay taxes on that money. (Ditto if you use your raise to pay doctors directly.) Almost everyone takes the tax break. The market for insurance bought by individuals is, as a result, small and stunted, which is all the more reason to stay in the employer system.

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      Friday, November 02, 2007

      The Income Gap

      If you want to read an article that shows the disconnect between rhetoric and reality and completely misses the point on "Income Gap" by literally pretending things are true that aren't true...read this.

      Here are a couple of highlights:
      One intuitive measure of inequality is to compare "high-income" and "low-income" families. Suppose we define a high income level as income at the 90th percentile: that is, the income level higher than that of 90 percent of all families but lower than that of the top 10 percent. Similarly, we can define a low income level as the income at the 10th percentile.
      A sign of no economic foundation is words like "intuitive", "suppose", "can". This method of defining inequality is not only arbitrary, but also useless.

      This part is the part I agree with:

      Why has inequality increased?

      It is always tempting to look for a single cause that can explain a major social or economic event, but in all likelihood the growing gap between rich and poor has many causes. A list of the "usual suspects" is easy to compile; evaluating their relative importance is far more difficult.

      Much evidence points toward declining demand for low-skilled workers as a crucial factor. In the view of many economists, the principal source of this shift has been technological change that has allowed firms to economize on low-skilled labor while increasing the demand for highly educated workers. Ironically, these changes are broadly a consequence of the growing importance of computers and automation in the economy, the very technological advances that have helped drive the current economic boom.

      Globalization of the economy may also have played a role. In the past 25 years, low-skilled American workers have experienced increasing competition from both low-paid immigrants and low-paid workers living in other parts of the world who produce goods that compete with American products. Although the effects of globalization are not negligible, most economists think they are less significant than the effects of technological change on wage inequality.

      Finally, institutional changes in the labor market have had an impact. These include the declining membership in labor unions in the private sector and the declining real value of the legal minimum wage, which until recently had been severely eroded by inflation.

      International comparisons support this analysis. The pressures on low-skilled wages from technological change and globalization have affected all developed economies, but the growth of inequality has been far greater in the United States. International differences in wage-setting institutions and income-transfer programs may explain the different outcomes. They may also help account for the higher unemployment rates in many other developed economies, a perspective that casts the U.S. experience in a more favorable light.

      This is all precisely true...Did you like that last part, though? The U.S. in a more favorable light for lower unemployment...THE HORROR!!

      But then they get to the "solution" and something really cool happens. They dismiss ALL of the above as completely irrelevant:

      Individual and communal acts of charity will always play a role in reducing the adverse effects of income inequality, but significant reductions of inequality will depend upon the government's power to tax, transfer, and regulate. Inevitably, however, redistributive policies involve real costs, in terms of both their economic impact and the infringements of property rights that accompany them. Thus there is a trade-off between equity and other values. To minimize the damage to these other values, two principles of policy design-efficiency and efficacy-should guide us as we evaluate proposals for reducing inequality.

      If a policy is efficient, it will achieve its redistributive goals at minimal cost to the economy as a whole. Perhaps surprisingly, the criterion of efficiency is usually better served by policies that treat the symptoms, rather than the causes, of inequality.

      For instance, to the extent that import competition is a source of downward pressure on low-skilled wages, protectionist trade policy could counteract the trend. Yet protectionism comes at a high cost to consumers and trade-dependent sectors of the economy. More efficient would be a policy that directly enhanced low-skilled workers' incomes, whether through training, subsidies, or minimum wages.

      So, technological changes, globalization, a lack of education in the workforce is best solved by simply "taxing, transferring, and regulating." The source of the problem is simply not important. Well there you go. At least they acknowledge the "trade off" between property rights and equity.

      The rest of the article continues to argue against itself in the most extraordinary ways, and it's really fun to read. Within a couple of paragraphs, training and minimum wages are supported and then not supported. A good idea would have been for the Applied Ethics Department of Santa Clara University to go have a little conversation with the Economics department of Santa Clara University. It might've resulted in a slightly less ridiculous article. So OK, this isn't really the best article to illustrate the argument on the "Income Inequality Crisis." But it illustrates pretty well how rhetoric can so quickly and easily win out over science, logic and reason.

      The Income Gap

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      Tuesday, September 25, 2007

      Do it for the children!

      A good article by Grover Norquist on the upcoming socialized health care for middle class kids bill S-CHIP. Norquist drives home the obvious distinction between "complimentary" and "free", a distinction lost on all tax-and-spend types like Arnold Schwarzenegger and Hillary Clinton.

      "Complementary" means you pay for a service whether you use it or not. Because the charge isn't explicit but rather rolled into a separate bill (the complementary breakfast at a hotel or seminar, for example, is calculated in your room bill), you are likely not to notice it. The cost of complimentary breakfast is negligible, but you start adding exercise rooms, wireless internet, and rock climbing walls, and your hotel bill starts expanding exponentially.

      "Free" is when you pay the discount rate and still get all the other perks at no extra cost. On a microeconomic scale, hotels can bear the burden of giveaways if the profit margin on the other guests is sufficiently high. On a national scale, it simply isn't rational to think in terms of "free" health care. It's all complementary.

      A good passage from Norquist:

      According to the Congressional Budget Office, every man, woman, and child in the U.S. will owe $8,590 in taxes this year alone. Considering everyone’s share of the economy is only $45,737, that’s quite a tax bite. All told, nearly one out of every five dollars our economy produces each year gets sucked into federal tax coffers. Throw in state and local taxes, and it is one dollar out of every three. Going forward, the pressures that Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid will force on taxpayers will undoubtedly make that figure rise. Some estimate that half of national income will go toward paying taxes, and most of it for these entitlement programs. One would think that Congress wouldn’t create a brand new entitlement program to add to this burden. But such thinking would be wrong.

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      Thursday, July 12, 2007

      Three-Lane Highway

      Mirrored at Another Loud Blog.

      Steven Perlstein had a great article (that I missed from 3 months ago--sorry) in the Post about the constant struggle in Northern Virginia of getting out of what we're putting into Richmond. He had a great and sneaky proposal:
      Here's how it would work: First, push through the 1 percent regional income tax. Then, dispatch the Northern Virginia delegation to Richmond with a revolutionary proposal to reduce the statewide income tax by one percentage point. Having preached for decades about the evils of taxation, Republican leaders would be hard-pressed to resist the idea. The net result would be that Northern Virginians would pay no more or no less in income taxes, but would get to keep $700 million of their own money rather than sharing it with those moochers downstate.
      This goes pretty well to my point about what's missing from the NVTA: tax relief from Richmond.

      It's really a travesty, and it makes me wonder if it would better to go back to a classic City State model like the Ancient Greeks. At least we would have only one entity to pay taxes to. Currently it's a long list:

      * HOA fees
      * Town Taxes
      * County Taxes
      * NVTA Taxes (**NEW!!**)
      * State Taxes
      * Federal Taxes

      Sooner or later we'll add:

      * UN dues
      * Solar System Taxes
      * Milky Way Galaxy Taxes
      * Intergalactic Local Group dues
      * Virgo SuperCluster assessment

      And again, I'll ask: How many Governments does it take to screw in a light bulb?

      washingtonpost.com

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      Thursday, June 21, 2007

      Stelly plan reversal in the works

      From what I understand, this is good news for the state of Louisiana.

      Reversal of 'Stelly Plan' moves through Senate's tax committee
      via KATC - Louisiana Headlines on Jun 21, 2007

      BATON ROUGE, La. -- A proposal to reverse some of the tax changes known as the "Stelly Plan" advanced on Wednesday, which could mean breaks for Louisianians who itemize their state...

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      Saturday, March 03, 2007

      Not for a lack of trying





      If corporate tax receipts are too low in the US, it's not for a lack of trying by the US govt. Could it be that personal income has risen since 1930, thus more receipts come from personal income tax because there is more personal income? Just a thought.

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      My new favorite Democrat

      My new favorite Democrat in the US of A just happens to represent my hometown. Nick Gautreaux of Abbeville has proposed to eliminate the personal income tax in Louisiana.
      Gautreaux's bill would keep in effect the tax rates and tax brackets on personal income taxes but would lower the amount paid by individuals by 10 percent a year until the tax is phased out by Jan. 1, 2016. For example, in the present tax year, taxpayers would pay 90 percent of their tax bills to the state and 80 percent next year.
      But my favorite is this quote:
      "This gives a break to the working-class people," he said. "For the last several years we have had a surplus. . . . That tells me we are overtaxed. . . . It is time to give taxpayers a tax break. Why should government grow and add more and more programs?"
      Can someone get Howard Dean on the phone? This guy needs to sit down with Nancy Pelosi and company and set them straight.

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      Tuesday, November 01, 2005

      Bi-weekly Right Wing Newsletters


      Tuesday, November 01, 2005
      Bi-weekly Right Wing Newsletters
      You know how every Friday Mr. and Mrs. Jones has a little more pep in their step and is a little more open to spending money? I mean, usually Friday afternoons is gravy time right? You just get off work, possibly early, and finally receive that hard earned dough.

      Yun-ju and I are beginning to realize we are not the typical Mr. and Mrs. Jones. I am still getting a measley stipend, but every other Friday Yun-ju gets paid and we are down in the dumps. She is almost on the verge of tears for every paycheck. I have to console her and wipe her tears. "Why do I work so hard so the government can take all my money?" Roughly 30% of every dollar comes right off the top. Columbus has the #17th highest "local" [LOCAL!] income tax in the country, and a 7% sales tax on top of it. All to pay for dilapidated schools and hardly any public transportation.

      Plenty of cops though. hmmm.

      I always find these encounters so charming, however. Every time Yun-ju rants on taxes, I think, "Oh, we really are meant to be together."
      Posted at 10:38 pm by Johnny B
      Posted by Jordan @ 11/03/2005 12:59 PM PST
      I hear you. I'm giving up 40% every check.
      Posted by Johnny B @ 11/03/2005 01:28 PM PST
      Can you claim school loan repayment off your taxable income? It's time for you to get a mortgage and have kids, Jordan, in order to keep any of your money. Even then you'll still get hammered!

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      Thursday, September 15, 2005

      Liberal Words I hate

      "Awareness": a perfectly good word forever ruined by liberalism. Whenever you hear a presentation or read a paper in which the words, "The goal of this project is to raise awareness..." start calculating new tax deductions.
      Posted at 11:35 pm by Johnny B
      Posted by Logipundit @ 09/15/2005 11:57 PM PDT
      I've got my CPA working overtime already.

      Maybe we should write a paper to raise awareness on the wastefullness of academic pursuits for the sake of academic pursuit.

      One of these days I'm going to do a full post on why the space program is a dismal failure, and always will be unless our PURPOSE is more than "knowledge" and "exploration".

      The problem with "awareness" is that the only people that give a flying flip about academic "awareness" campaigns are other academics.
      Posted by Rothell @ 09/16/2005 12:34 PM PDT
      You guys crack me up. "Awareness" had never struck me as a particularly liberal word. But, Broussard, if that's what you think, then consider words that for me have lost their value in contemporary Republican rhetoric.

      "Freedom." Bush loves to use this word. It is like kryptnonite to the evil "TERRORISTS!" That's what they want to "destroy." Yeah. That always made sense to me. Bad guys rubbing their hands together, hatching plots to blow up the world because the idea of "freedom" just drives them bonkers.

      Other words: "destroy," "victorious," "resolved." These typically come straight from the horse's mouth, George W. Bush, whose speeches might go well as narration for a Rocky movie but not as real speech pertaining to our own reality.

      My favorite, though, is "terrorist." Acts of "terrorism" have been a military strategy since the invention of war. That is a fact, not my opinion. Did the United States (and its allies, particularly Britain) drop bombs on hundreds of villages and cities in Germany during Worlds War 2? Yes. Did we do the same in Vietnam? Yes. Fact: we dropped more bombs on a New Jersey-sized country than all the bombs dropped on Europe combined in the second worlds war. What do we call that? Well the U.S. government doesn't want to call that terrorism! But is it?
      (I hate to write this because these are dark days when you cannot openly discuss acts of criminality under U.S. government direction without fearing some Bush cronie is going to come and arrest you.)
      The plane-hijackers and suicide-bombers are terrorists. But that word should mean little to people who can think for themselves, because its sad but true that the U.S. has got blood on its hands too.
      Posted by Logipundit @ 09/16/2005 06:46 PM PDT
      Hey Rothell,

      Real quick, remind me of your address.

      Just...uh...curious.
      Posted by Logipundit @ 09/16/2005 07:03 PM PDT
      speaking of words...here's a reason to be selective of what Thesaurus you buy...kind of interesting.

      http://brain-terminal.com/posts/2005/09/07/rogets-arab

      Oh and by the way, here's some other words that I feel that the left has hijacked:

      "choice"--basic right applied only to women and only to the right to have an abortion...no choice of schools, or religions, or anything else.

      "progressive"--making sure that every single aspect of the "great society" is completely unchanged from it's original structure established in the mid 1960's.

      "nuanced"-- a form of logic and reason carefully crafted to fall in line with every left-leaning thought conceived since the dawn of birth control.

      "enlightened"--atheist

      "intellectual"--atheist

      "priveleged"--those who pay taxes

      I could go on and on...we should write a dictionary.

      Posted by Logipundit @ 09/16/2005 07:16 PM PDT
      OH and by the way...it's interesting you mention the word "terrorist". I really don't really see the problem with the word as a practical matter.

      If I was German when we were bombing Dresden, I might indeed have called the US terrorists. And if I were a VietCong soldier, I may have indeed called the US military terrorists...but what's your point? Are you saying it's a matter of perspective? Of course it is.

      Would you rather we use less generic words?

      How about Islamic terrorists? Or Muslim extremists? Or ragheads? What do you want? I think terrorist is the most politically correct, practical, and precise term for the people that we are indeed fighting against. Maybe they call us terrorists, too, but what difference does that make?

      The whole world has been using the word terrorism since at least the 70s, and even the most politically left have to acknowledge that there is a certain type of violence or fighting or whatever you call it that can be easily defined as terrorism.

      Anyway, I'm having trouble getting your point, but that's OK...I know you really don't need one. It was indeed a great way to remind us all that the US is still evil and imperialistic, and I sure appreciate the reminder.
      Posted by john broussard @ 09/17/2005 08:54 AM PDT
      Rothell,
      I had thought about "terrorist" and "freedom" too. Those are fair points in that the value of the words is kind of lost for now, but #1 You'll get no sympathy for German villagers from me. WWI was much to a more inconclusive standstill, and twenty years later there was another war. Bombing into submission was a policy is the price the Germans had to pay. #2 It was the rise of communism, not American bombing, that drove massive Vietnamese immigration. As the bad as the former was, you got to question which is worse. If America wins the war the Vietnamese would be about a million times better off...they were truly the losers there.
      Posted by john broussard @ 09/17/2005 10:12 AM PDT
      Hey Rothell,

      What's your take on the German election?
      http://abcnews.go.com/International/wireStory?id=1134885

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      Sunday, April 17, 2005

      Random Thoughts

      A mysterious email popped into my mailbox on April 15. It contained a single line
      http://www.wnd.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=43820
      This link contained an interesting article about the Federal Reserve. World News Daily is pretty cool, my kind of website. I think usury is bad and all, but the abolition of the federal reserve, though constitutional, is bit weird. I mean 138 countries have a central bank. France and Canada have a central bank. Are there websites and newspapers denounce the Banque du France? Maybe so, and I haven't heard of them.

      Are the bankers at the Bank of Canada acting solely in the interests of Canadian citizens? Canadian or no, a banker is a banker.

      That being said, I say sure, why not, abolish the federal reserve.


      On an unrelated note, any of y'all know about health insurance, and buying it yourself. Any self-employed salesmen out there using pay-to-play or emergency insurance, or simply HMO or PPO? In fact, if any of y'all know of any insurance salesmen who knows about health insurance, I'd love to hear more about it. I'm really serious, and not being sarcastic.


      Posted at 10:51 pm by Johnny B
      Posted by BP @ 04/18/2005 08:23 AM PDT
      don't know anyone who does that, but I'll ask around.

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      Sunday, March 06, 2005

      Big government versus corporate theft?

      I've been a big fan of privatizing social security, at least reforming it, on the basis that the richest group of people in America are 65 and older. No matter how rich someone gets, they still benefits. I'm sure those old fogies are sending their SS checks directly to the nearest charity. Also, it sucks that people get no return on their initial investment with SS. That is essentially the government stealing from the poor to give to ...whomever. So, I like privatization, but why does an American have to invest in the stock market for tax free status. I've been burned by the stock market big time. Am I supposed to feel good if my money is yoinked by mutual fund managers and crooked CEOs, rather than the government?

      Why can't I invest my money in other capital and allow the return on that capital to pay for my retirement? Let's say I save up 3K a year and purchase a lumber yard with a couple of partners. Why can't I save up my money and do that, say, when I'm forty, instead of giving it to a company managed by people I don't know?


      Posted at 10:53 am by Johnny B
      Posted by BP @ 03/09/2005 08:15 AM PST
      Three points...

      One, income tax is not in the least bit constituitional anyway, and neither is social security, however the former has created a monster that unfortunately needs to be fed, and the latter was a "promise" that was made to seniors 70 years ago that needs to be kept, and the only way to keep it is to get better returns than the one percent that the current fund is getting is to privatize.

      Two, you don't have to put money in AOL, Intel, and Ebay stock to get decent returns. The money can easily be invested in municipal bonds and blue chip stocks and get double or triple the returns that they're currently getting at very very low risk.

      The logic is that your average person doesn't have the resources or the know-how to put their money to get virtually risk-free decent returns, and since it's not politically feasible for lawmakers to say..."Hey let's just get rid of that Social Security thing altogether and let folks invest their own damn money!", the "lesser of two evils" is the one that's going to actually keep up with inflation.
      Posted by Jordan @ 03/13/2005 05:53 PM PST
      U.S. Constitution
      Amendment XVI

      The Congress shall have power to lay and collect taxes on incomes, from whatever source derived, without apportionment among the several states, and without regard to any census or enumeration.


      You meant, income tax shouldn't be constitutional?
      Posted by BP @ 03/14/2005 11:10 PM PST
      I stand corrected.

      Here's an interesting little history...http://www.wealth4freedom.com/16thHistory.htm

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