A criticism often leveled at the Republicans in particular and conservatives in general is that they believe in "trickle down economics".
The general idea being that the GOP supports cutting taxes for the wealthy mainly and hoping the benefits they received will "trickle down" to the people below them as the wealthy spend money and/or invest in new job creating opportunities.
It seems to be widely denigrated because to many it seems unfair. Why should a few wealthy people get to pay less in taxes while the rank in file only get benefits second hand?
But isn't this the way it should be? If some middle class person gets a $1,000 tax cut, are they really likely to invest it in some new technology or in starting a new business? I would say that chances are they'll use the money to retire some debt or by some creature comforts.
On the other hand, a wealthy person who gets a $500,000 tax break I woiuld say is far, far more likely to actually put the increased money to good use.
To answer the thread question: "What is wrong with "trickle down economics?"
In theory, nothing. In reality, everything. It's that simple.
Supply Side Economics is simply "the rich pissing on the poor"..
At this time, our wealthiest Americans have the lowest tax burden at any time since the income tax was implimented and so I ask you, where are the jobs these "creators" have made?
Overseas, in China and India ...
Thank you.I have nothing against people in other countries getting work. We're all trying to make it, but Americans are losing jobs that aren't coming back...
How do we best compete with those countries that are getting "our jobs"? Would threatening rich people with higher taxes make our country more comparative and encourage wealthy millionaires to leave those tax shelter countries so they can come back to the US and pay higher taxes. Tell me of one thing Obama's doing that makes millionaires and billionaires want to leave those other countries and come to the US to create more jobs, can you name a single thing? Democrats think raising taxes on the rich will bring in more jobs, so tell me how does that happen?
Let me give it a try, how about investing in Education?
Ok, suppose we invest in education and we get some results, we have some people who are educated, then some millionare calls them back and says something like this. "Well I have a job for you, and it looks like you have some valuable skills that our company could really use, but the thing is this job is in another country because of the favorable tax climate, so here's what I'll do, I'll purchase tickets for you and your family, cover all moving expenses so you can come to this country and work for me, how does that sound?"
Oh, no, no, no. I’m not saying that they are “our jobs.” That’s why I mentioned specifically that I don’t have anything against people, no matter who or where they are, getting work. My only point was that the “job creation” that’s supposed to be happening for Americans due to “trickle-down economics” is not what it seems. And as for my post, I didn’t mention “threatening” or “Obama,” so I’m not sure what you’re on about.
And as to your point about education fixing things, well, I’ve read and seen reports that mention this, and I agree to a certain extent. Here’s the issue that hasn’t been answered for me and which causes my agreement to be limited: I read about our engineering sector, and how jobs are being lost to immigrants brought over here (and I have no problem with immigrants, none at all) who’ll take, say, an engineering job that would normally pay $90,000 per year, but the immigrant worker will do it for $45-50,000 per year. So, that ends up driving down the pay scale that someone with an advanced education can count on. Meanwhile, the cost of living in America (and sending your kids to college) isn’t going down at all.
Theoretically hiring workers at a lower rate, domestically and overseas, is supposed to bring or keep the cost of goods down for Americans, but if Americans don’t have jobs anymore or jobs that pay as much anymore because they’ve gone overseas (think of the manufacturing sector), then we can’t buy as much anyway. It’s a real problem, and I don’t see any easy solutions. That’s the problem with globalization. All economies are not equal. This was true before Mr. Obama took office, btw.