Why leave it alone; cutting taxes is the only really effective tool the federal government (not the federal reserve) has to give some boost to the economy.Leave it the Hell alone. The economy is a chaotic system, and all the economic prognosticating by all the Nobel prize-winning economists won't change that.
They should be blaming Enron, obviously. That doesn't change the fact that this recession wasn't caused by corporate mistrust; if anything, it was caused by trusting corporate financial statements too much. These dirty accounting practices were going on all throughout the Clinton years, and although people had called into question the insanity of Worldcom and Enron's books, no one gave a damn.So the people who lost their retirement funds and jobs should blame the recession and not dirty accounting practices by Enron?
Enron was running a fucking PE ratio of 500 to 1 at one point. That kind of number would have never been trusted 10 years ago, before irrational exuberance (as we now call it) hit.
Disallow competing factions to have a voice in the government? James Madison would be smiling.First outlaw any and all lobbying, then we can talk about cutting spending. Hell, cutting the War on Drugs alone might even do it.
And no, cutting the war on drugs alone wouldn't do it. If I'm not mistaken, the federal government spends only about 20 billion a year on the drug war, hardly the kind of number we're looking for.
Hard to say. In any case these are some seriously small tax cuts we're talking about here, and George Bush probably won't even get the number he wants. I doubt the effect on the budget will be very great, provided we at least limit the growth of spending, since we won't outright cut it.But will the effect give the government more money than if it had simply left the tax rates alone? That's the gamble, and people who gamble to pay their debts don't usually come out on top.