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freshjiva
03-28-2011, 11:10 AM
Solid interview.

http://finance.yahoo.com/blogs/daily-ticker/peter-schiff-u-abolish-corporate-personal-income-taxes-20110328-074446-749.html?sec=topStories&pos=9&asset=&ccode=

ClayTrainor
03-28-2011, 11:20 AM
Abolish Corporate and Personal Income Taxes

b..b...but who will build the roads? :p:D

Zippyjuan
03-28-2011, 01:37 PM
Peter also talks about balancing the budget and supports a Balanced Budget amendment. Curious how he would propose to do that while getting rid of all (well, most anyways) of your revenue. Ron Paul at least has said you need to balance the budget first before you reduce taxation. A nice goal- but not a realistic one. For the year 2009, total government revenues were $2.7 trillion and $1.55 trillion of that came from individual income taxes ($1.2 trillion) and corporate taxes($339 billion). http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2009_United_States_federal_budget If you eliminated those without any budget cuts, your deficit would go from $1.7 trillion to $3.29 trillion. It would be impossible (it already is) to achieve a balanced budget via cuts and tossing in those tax cuts. That would leave you with $1.1 trillion to spend- "Mandatory spending" alone comprises twice that amount. 2010 budget numbers- let's see him cut $3.2 trillion out of this (I would like to see him balance this even without any tax changes- getting rid of $1.7 trillion in spending):

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2010_United_States_federal_budget

Mandatory spending: $2.009 trillion (-20.1%)

$695 billion (+4.9%) – Social Security
$571 billion (−15.2%) – Other mandatory programs
$453 billion (+6.6%) – Medicare
$290 billion (+12.0%) – Medicaid
$164 billion (+18.0%) – Interest on National Debt
$11 billion (+275%) – Potential disaster costs
$0 billion (−100%) – Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP)
$0 billion (−100%) – Financial stabilization efforts

.Discretionary spending: $1.368 trillion (+13.1%)

$663.7 billion (+12.7%) – Department of Defense (including Overseas Contingency Operations)
$78.7 billion (−1.7%) – Department of Health and Human Services
$72.5 billion (+2.8%) – Department of Transportation
$52.5 billion (+10.3%) – Department of Veterans Affairs
$51.7 billion (+40.9%) – Department of State and Other International Programs
$47.5 billion (+18.5%) – Department of Housing and Urban Development
$46.7 billion (+12.8%) – Department of Education
$42.7 billion (+1.2%) – Department of Homeland Security
$26.3 billion (−0.4%) – Department of Energy
$26.0 billion (+8.8%) – Department of Agriculture
$23.9 billion (−6.3%) – Department of Justice
$18.7 billion (+5.1%) – National Aeronautics and Space Administration
$13.8 billion (+48.4%) – Department of Commerce
$13.3 billion (+4.7%) – Department of Labor
$13.3 billion (+4.7%) – Department of the Treasury
$12.0 billion (+6.2%) – Department of the Interior
$10.5 billion (+34.6%) – Environmental Protection Agency
$9.7 billion (+10.2%) – Social Security Administration
$7.0 billion (+1.4%) – National Science Foundation
$5.1 billion (−3.8%) – Corps of Engineers
$5.0 billion (+100%) – National Infrastructure Bank
$1.1 billion (+22.2%) – Corporation for National and Community Service
$0.7 billion (0.0%) – Small Business Administration
$0.6 billion (−14.3%) – General Services Administration
$19.8 billion (+3.7%) – Other Agencies
$105 billion – Other

low preference guy
03-28-2011, 01:39 PM
Curious how he would propose to do that while getting rid of all (well, most anyways) of your revenue.

He proposes abolishing entire departments, cutting military spending, and most importantly, implementing means testing for the entitlements, to the point that you can only receive them if you're destitute.

Zippyjuan
03-28-2011, 02:16 PM
You can cut every single department 100% and still not get rid of the deficit at current levels. Check the numbers above. Those suggestions would not even cut it in half. Abolish every single department including the Department of Defense and you are still $400 billion short. Rand Paul's proposal goes farther- and even his would only reduce the deficit by one third- you need to cut three times even Rand's numbers. Any tax cuts would make things even worse as far as the deficit is concerned.

erowe1
03-28-2011, 02:17 PM
Peter also talks about balancing the budget and supports a Balanced Budget amendment. Curious how he would propose to do that while getting rid of all (well, most anyways) of your revenue. Ron Paul at least has said you need to balance the budget first before you reduce taxation.

I haven't heard RP say that. I hope you misheard him. But if that really is RP's position, I have to go with Schiff on this one. Reducing taxation should always happen. There is no limit to how much taxes should be cut and to how soon they should be cut. And there should be no prerequisite placed on it. If you want government to spend less, the best way to achieve that is to starve it of its funds.

low preference guy
03-28-2011, 02:23 PM
You can cut every single department 100% and still not get rid of the deficit at current levels. Check the numbers above. Those suggestions would not even cut it in half. Abolish every single department including the Department of Defense and you are still $400 billion short. Rand Paul's proposal goes farther- and even his would only reduce the deficit by one third- you need to cut three times even Rand's numbers. Any tax cuts would make things even worse as far as the deficit is concerned.

You forgot to read the most important part of the proposal, the part about implementing means testing for entitlements.

Zippyjuan
03-28-2011, 02:36 PM
You forgot to read the most important part of the proposal, the part about implementing means testing for entitlements.

I read it. Check the numbers again. Cut every department by 100%. (I seriously doubt Schiff has proposed anything near that drastic). You are now down to $400 billion for your deficit. Now let's means test Social Security. Let's make it harsh and reduce payouts by 50%. You have reduced spending by $350 billion (down from $695 billion). You still have a deficit. Granted it is now about $50 billion but it is not gone. And again- that is before any tax cuts. Get rid of simply income taxes and you have to cut a further $1.2 trillion dollars on top of all that.


I haven't heard RP say that. I hope you misheard him.

I would have to dig to find it, but he stated it a couple of times during the Presidential campaign. Cutting taxes was the ultimate goal, but getting finances in order had to be accomplished first.

Fredom101
03-28-2011, 03:02 PM
However, Schiff is for the dreaded, so-called "Fair Tax." :( :(

JCLibertarian
03-28-2011, 03:21 PM
b..b...but who will build the roads? :p:D

I suppose federal gas taxes will pay for them like they always have since the creation of the Federal Highway system. If socialist dolts are going to advocate income theft, they should at least understand where the stolen money goes.

TheNcredibleEgg
03-28-2011, 03:34 PM
I read it. Check the numbers again. Cut every department by 100%. (I seriously doubt Schiff has proposed anything near that drastic). You are now down to $400 billion for your deficit. Now let's means test Social Security. Let's make it harsh and reduce payouts by 50%. You have reduced spending by $350 billion (down from $695 billion). You still have a deficit. Granted it is now about $50 billion but it is not gone. And again- that is before any tax cuts. Get rid of simply income taxes and you have to cut a further $1.2 trillion dollars on top of all that.


Just a note : You did not factor in any revenue from the alternative proposed consumption tax.

Also: listen to the interview. The headline for the interview is misleading. Peter doesn't come out and flat out say cut income tax and corporate tax. He only says to cut the corporate tax to zero. He then lists alternatives to the income tax - including a consumption tax or flat tax or combination. But for your figures - he only explicitly wants to cut the corporate tax to zero. (339B)

Maximus
03-28-2011, 03:37 PM
However, Schiff is for the dreaded, so-called "Fair Tax." :( :(

I'd take the fair tax over the income tax. That is his position as well. It is also Ron's. I doesn't mean he likes either tax, just that one is better than the other.

enoch150
03-28-2011, 03:42 PM
Peter also talks about balancing the budget and supports a Balanced Budget amendment. Curious how he would propose to do that while getting rid of all (well, most anyways) of your revenue. Ron Paul at least has said you need to balance the budget first before you reduce taxation. A nice goal- but not a realistic one. For the year 2009, total government revenues were $2.7 trillion and $1.55 trillion of that came from individual income taxes ($1.2 trillion) and corporate taxes($339 billion). http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2009_United_States_federal_budget If you eliminated those without any budget cuts, your deficit would go from $1.7 trillion to $3.29 trillion. It would be impossible (it already is) to achieve a balanced budget via cuts and tossing in those tax cuts. That would leave you with $1.1 trillion to spend- "Mandatory spending" alone comprises twice that amount. 2010 budget numbers- let's see him cut $3.2 trillion out of this (I would like to see him balance this even without any tax changes- getting rid of $1.7 trillion in spending):

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2010_United_States_federal_budget

Your numbers are wrong. Those were estimates, for one thing. Even the link you provide estimates outlays to be $3.1 Trillion. So how can you add $1.55 Trillion to a $1 Trillion deficit and get $3.2 Trillion? Not that it matters, since those numbers are wrong.

Actual 2009 revenue: $2.1 Trillion
Actual 2009 outlays: $3.5 Trillion

Revenue from individual and corporate income tax: $1.1 Trillion

Deducting $1.1 T from $2.1 T leaves $1 Trillion in revenue and a $2.5 Trillion deficit.

http://www.cbo.gov/ftpdocs/120xx/doc12039/HistoricalTables%5B1%5D.pdf

Also, Schiff has said he favors a national sales tax as the least bad form of taxation to balance the budget, in addition to massive budget cuts. Ron Paul has said something similar - that a sales tax was preferable to the income tax, although nothing is preferable to both.

enoch150
03-28-2011, 03:44 PM
Cut every department by 100%. (I seriously doubt Schiff has proposed anything near that drastic).

Pretty close. Peter Schiff makes Rand Paul look like just another big government politician.

Zippyjuan
03-29-2011, 01:36 PM
Your numbers are wrong. Those were estimates, for one thing. Even the link you provide estimates outlays to be $3.1 Trillion. So how can you add $1.55 Trillion to a $1 Trillion deficit and get $3.2 Trillion? Not that it matters, since those numbers are wrong.

Actual 2009 revenue: $2.1 Trillion
Actual 2009 outlays: $3.5 Trillion

Revenue from individual and corporate income tax: $1.1 Trillion

Deducting $1.1 T from $2.1 T leaves $1 Trillion in revenue and a $2.5 Trillion deficit.

http://www.cbo.gov/ftpdocs/120xx/doc12039/HistoricalTables%5B1%5D.pdf

Also, Schiff has said he favors a national sales tax as the least bad form of taxation to balance the budget, in addition to massive budget cuts. Ron Paul has said something similar - that a sales tax was preferable to the income tax, although nothing is preferable to both.

I was using the projected $1.7 trillion deficit for this year and adding in the 2009 estimated income taxes collected. $1.7 trillion plus $1.5 trillion if you got rid of income taxes comes to $3.2 trillion. I don't use estimated income tax collections for this year since those numbers are not available.

Let us consider what a national sales tax would be.

Using US GDP of $14 trillion (which includes government spending) and 2010 spending of $3.55 trillion, to balance the budget simply by using a sales tax on everything in the GDP that comes to 25%. Subtract out the government spending and you have $10.4 trillion in goods and services so a tax on that amount to fund all of the government spending would be 34% on every good and service except government. This increases your tax burden unless you are already in the top bracket. This does assume that spending stays where it is and the sales tax replaces all other taxes including Social Security and Medicare taxes along with income and corporate taxes.

Peter has in the past said that tax cuts without spending cuts make things worse. http://www.economiccollapse.net/funding-tax-cuts-through-debt

December 8, 2010 12:35 pm · 0 Comments

According to Peter Schiff, the extension of the current federal income tax structure is a good thing, but without government spending cuts, we’re funding it through more debt. We’re going to face the same old problems,


He does talk about reducing the deficit and balancing the budget but I have not really seen any detailed proposals. Perhaps somebody can provide a link. Thank you.

Zippyjuan
03-29-2011, 02:01 PM
Just a note : You did not factor in any revenue from the alternative proposed consumption tax.

Also: listen to the interview. The headline for the interview is misleading. Peter doesn't come out and flat out say cut income tax and corporate tax. He only says to cut the corporate tax to zero. He then lists alternatives to the income tax - including a consumption tax or flat tax or combination. But for your figures - he only explicitly wants to cut the corporate tax to zero. (339B)

Thank you for pointing that out. If we get rid of corporate taxes we only have to cut $2 trillion (current $1.7 trillion deficit plus some $350 billion in corporate taxes cut) from the budget to get it to balance. Still impossible to do.

silverhandorder
03-29-2011, 02:28 PM
Thank you for pointing that out. If we get rid of corporate taxes we only have to cut $2 trillion (current $1.7 trillion deficit plus some $350 billion in corporate taxes cut) from the budget to get it to balance. Still impossible to do.

So what's your plan? Sit on unsustainable budget until default? Redistribute wealth?

The government spends money on consumption and not investment. The fact that Joe sixpack will get his entitlements will not cause America as a country produce more. If anything we are neglecting investment into capital. Something has to give and if we do nothing it will be across the board cuts. Do you suggest we wait until then since sentiment is so much against us? You think it is a waste of time or something?

The reason why I am asking is because I don't understand the point of criticizing someone without having your own opinion to insert. Sorry if I jump to conclusions about your opinion in the absence of it.

Fredom101
03-29-2011, 02:43 PM
I'd take the fair tax over the income tax. That is his position as well. It is also Ron's. I doesn't mean he likes either tax, just that one is better than the other.

Not true, RP has stated repeatedly that he would like to replace the income tax with NOTHING. He only said that given the choice, he would go with the "fair" tax, but he understands that both taxes are theft, and consumption taxes would be a nightmare for a lot of reasons.

Let's have NO tax, since even a little bit of theft is too much.

enoch150
03-29-2011, 03:21 PM
I was using the projected $1.7 trillion deficit for this year and adding in the 2009 estimated income taxes collected. $1.7 trillion plus $1.5 trillion if you got rid of income taxes comes to $3.2 trillion. I don't use estimated income tax collections for this year since those numbers are not available.

Let us consider what a national sales tax would be.

Using US GDP of $14 trillion (which includes government spending) and 2010 spending of $3.55 trillion, to balance the budget simply by using a sales tax on everything in the GDP that comes to 25%. Subtract out the government spending and you have $10.4 trillion in goods and services so a tax on that amount to fund all of the government spending would be 34% on every good and service except government. This increases your tax burden unless you are already in the top bracket. This does assume that spending stays where it is and the sales tax replaces all other taxes including Social Security and Medicare taxes along with income and corporate taxes.

Peter has in the past said that tax cuts without spending cuts make things worse. http://www.economiccollapse.net/funding-tax-cuts-through-debt


He does talk about reducing the deficit and balancing the budget but I have not really seen any detailed proposals. Perhaps somebody can provide a link. Thank you.

Why would you use estimated 2009 revenue and 2011 spending projections? Like I said, your numbers are wrong.

In any case, I don't think I've ever seen a consolidated list of everything Schiff has proposed cutting, but I think you'd have an easier time finding the things he hasn't suggested cutting. At one time or another he's suggested abolishing just about every department and hasn't spared defense or entitlements from major reform and reduction. Schiff favors an immediately balanced budget, not one of these five year plans.

Even without specifics, given that Schiff has proposed the wholesale elimination of numerous departments, slashing defense, and entitlement reform - why would you assume his advocacy for a balanced budget with a national sales tax would fund government at the current $3.5 Trillion level?

Zippyjuan
03-30-2011, 02:29 PM
Why would you use estimated 2009 revenue and 2011 spending projections? Like I said, your numbers are wrong.

In any case, I don't think I've ever seen a consolidated list of everything Schiff has proposed cutting, but I think you'd have an easier time finding the things he hasn't suggested cutting. At one time or another he's suggested abolishing just about every department and hasn't spared defense or entitlements from major reform and reduction. Schiff favors an immediately balanced budget, not one of these five year plans.

Even without specifics, given that Schiff has proposed the wholesale elimination of numerous departments, slashing defense, and entitlement reform - why would you assume his advocacy for a balanced budget with a national sales tax would fund government at the current $3.5 Trillion level?

Perhaps you can provide us with some alternative numbers. I was using the most recent available figures. I welcome a look at others. We have to start with some sort of assumptions- unless we get specific numbers from somebody. You too are making assumptions that he would cut every program by 100% if he was elected to office.

I am going to make some more assumptions- based on some of your questions. Let us assume that we get a Rand Paul sized $500 billion in cuts instututed. Budget cuts are politically difficult to achieve since cutting popular programs (every program is popular to somebody) means losing votes- which elected officials don't want. That will drop government spending down to $3.05 trillion. Lets assume that the non- governemnt (and taxable) portion of GDP stays where it is or $10.4 trillion. Now keep the assumption that we use a national sales tax as the only source of revenue and balance our budget. Congratulations. We have reduced the national sales tax down to 29%.

MN Patriot
03-30-2011, 05:58 PM
I say instigate a tax revolt. Propose legislation to end payroll withholding of taxes. Make everyone write a check, or pay in cash, to the US Treasury every month.
Make it into a job creation program so the Democrats can support it. Hire more tax collectors. The Post Office is closing offices, turn those into IRS collection offices so it is convenient for everyone to visit their local tax office every month and pay their obligation to living in a civilized society.
Would people accept this state of affairs, or would they get sick of it in a hurry?
Let's find out by having our Tea Party Republicans introduce legislation to outlaw payroll withholding.

jkr
03-30-2011, 06:06 PM
dont forget "property" tax


that is a contradiction in terms.

if you get "taxed" (punished) you do not own.

QueenB4Liberty
03-30-2011, 06:17 PM
I say instigate a tax revolt. Propose legislation to end payroll withholding of taxes. Make everyone write a check, or pay in cash, to the US Treasury every month.
Make it into a job creation program so the Democrats can support it. Hire more tax collectors. The Post Office is closing offices, turn those into IRS collection offices so it is convenient for everyone to visit their local tax office every month and pay their obligation to living in a civilized society.
Would people accept this state of affairs, or would they get sick of it in a hurry?
Let's find out by having our Tea Party Republicans introduce legislation to outlaw payroll withholding.

sadly, I don't think that would make much of a difference, although I do like the idea. These people are just too far gone.

enoch150
03-31-2011, 12:50 PM
Perhaps you can provide us with some alternative numbers. I was using the most recent available figures. I welcome a look at others. We have to start with some sort of assumptions- unless we get specific numbers from somebody. You too are making assumptions that he would cut every program by 100% if he was elected to office.

I've already posted a link to the numbers for 1971 - 2010 . Total revenue and outlays are on page 1. Revenue by source is on page 4.

http://www.cbo.gov/ftpdocs/120xx/doc12039/HistoricalTables%5B1%5D.pdf


I am going to make some more assumptions- based on some of your questions. Let us assume that we get a Rand Paul sized $500 billion in cuts instututed. Budget cuts are politically difficult to achieve since cutting popular programs (every program is popular to somebody) means losing votes- which elected officials don't want. That will drop government spending down to $3.05 trillion. Lets assume that the non- governemnt (and taxable) portion of GDP stays where it is or $10.4 trillion. Now keep the assumption that we use a national sales tax as the only source of revenue and balance our budget. Congratulations. We have reduced the national sales tax down to 29%.

$500 billion in cuts is no more politically viable than a balanced budget, so why not just talk about Schiff's proposals as is? As explained in this interview with Rand Paul, Schiff operates on the assumption that Rand's one year $500 billion cut and balanced budget in five years is useless because we don't have five years. He thinks we need to balance the budget "right now." He was pushing Rand to go further - "if we're going to go down, go down swinging." He also asks Rand, about Social Security, "is there any way to reform a Ponzi scheme to make it work?"

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TXuJCmOWB2k&t=9m15s

In an interview with someone on the board of trustees for the SS Administration, Schiff startles the trustee by suggesting we immediately begin phasing out Social Security.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ITMEZImvNio

I've heard other speeches and interviews where he goes into more detail. But, like I said, I don't know of any single source that lists everything he has suggested cutting. Entitlements, the military, the departments - he'd take an axe to everything. I'm fairly certain he would propose enough cuts to balance the budget in a single year, and then start cutting more in the out years so that taxes could be cut, too. I'd expect $2.2 trillion in proposed outlays from him the first year - no more.

Now, if that happens, you could not assume a static $10.4 trillion private sector GDP. For one thing, you'd have an extra $1.3 trillion in investment capital available. And that's to say nothing of the regulatory burdens which would suddenly go unenforced because the government would no longer have the manpower. Conservatively, I would estimate the private sector GDP to jump to $11 trillion, which would make the national sales tax 20%. FICA taxes alone amount to 15.3% of people's income as federal taxes, even if they don't pay income taxes (employees effectively pay for the employer's portion). Do you really want me to find another 4.7% of income that even poor people pay to the feds as taxes?

Zippyjuan
03-31-2011, 01:24 PM
Thank you for the info. Your numbers posted match the "wrong" ones I used. I don't deny that Schiff has called for balancing the budget but don't see the details. He does speak in broad terms of things he thinks should be cut- and he is right on most of them. I also don't disagree that we need to start doing someting right now. The devil is in the details. As I pointed out, even without any changes in taxation, you can immediately reduce Social Security by 50% and cut every department in government by 100% including the Department of Defense- make them ALL zero dollars- and still not balance the budget this year.


He thinks we need to balance the budget "right now."

Now if you do institute cuts of $1.7 trillion (the projected shortfall for 2011), the GDP will take a huge hit. Not only do you lose the government spending portion of GDP, but those people in those jobs now have no job and no income. They are no longer out buying things from other businesses like grocery stores, hardwares stores, Best Buy or Walmart etc. Those businesses then have less money coming in and they need fewer workers so there will be even more layoffs. Tax base goes down even more meaning even less revenue for governments and more cuts. We have seen how this plays out over the past couple of years when even people who did not lose their jobs cut back on spending out of fear for losing theirs. Those cutbacks led to lower sales and businesses laid off even more people. And as we have seen, this trend is hard to reverse. Knocking $1.7 trillion out of the economy would have a similar negative impact on things.

enoch150
03-31-2011, 06:15 PM
Thank you for the info. Your numbers posted match the "wrong" ones I used.

No they don't. You said "For the year 2009, total government revenues were $2.7 trillion (it was actually $2.1 T) and $1.55 trillion of that came from individual income taxes ($1.2 trillion) (it was actually $.92 T) and corporate taxes($339 billion) (it was actually $.14 T).... Everything you used was estimates and projections, not the actual numbers (and from mismatched years, to confuse things even further).


I don't deny that Schiff has called for balancing the budget but don't see the details. He does speak in broad terms of things he thinks should be cut- and he is right on most of them. I also don't disagree that we need to start doing someting right now. The devil is in the details. As I pointed out, even without any changes in taxation, you can immediately reduce Social Security by 50% and cut every department in government by 100% including the Department of Defense- make them ALL zero dollars- and still not balance the budget this year.

In 2010:

Defense: $689 Billion. Cut in half, it's $345 Billion
SS, Medicaid, Medicare, and the rest of that stuff: $1.909 Trillion. Cut in half it's $955 Billion
Interest on debt: $197 Billion
All other departments go to $0

$955 + $345 + $197 = $1.497 Trillion

In 2010:

Individual income tax: $899 Billion
Corporate income tax: $191 Billion
Social insurance tax: $865 Billion
Excise tax: $67 Billion
Estate and Gift tax: $19 Billion
Customs: $25 Billion
Miscellaneous taxes: $96 Billion

Total tax confiscations in 2010: $2,162 Trillion

$2,162 (revenue) - 1,497 (outlays) = $665 Surplus

Not every department would have to go to $0, plus entitlement and defense spending reduced by 50% to balance the budget.


Now if you do institute cuts of $1.7 trillion (the projected shortfall for 2011), the GDP will take a huge hit.

Government projections are notoriously worthless. Use the 2010 numbers. $1.3 T. And no, the GDP will not take a huge hit. The money just stays in the private sector rather than being extracted and redistributed by the government. Unless you're referring just to the Fed's money printing? But the Fed isn't monetizing the entire deficit and that's not real GDP growth anyway, just inflation.


Not only do you lose the government spending portion of GDP, but those people in those jobs now have no job and no income. They are no longer out buying things from other businesses like grocery stores, hardwares stores, Best Buy or Walmart etc. Those businesses then have less money coming in and they need fewer workers so there will be even more layoffs. Tax base goes down even more meaning even less revenue for governments and more cuts. We have seen how this plays out over the past couple of years when even people who did not lose their jobs cut back on spending out of fear for losing theirs. Those cutbacks led to lower sales and businesses laid off even more people. And as we have seen, this trend is hard to reverse. Knocking $1.7 trillion out of the economy would have a similar negative impact on things.

Totally untrue. A lot of government jobs would be private sector jobs if the government wasn't involved. There will always be a need for teachers, firemen, police, etc. They may not have the same income if their jobs were funded by the private sector rather than with stolen tax money, but those jobs will still be there. And the reduced salary for them simply means other people have a higher income, so there is no net income change.

There are some jobs that the private sector would probably never fund: border patrol, tax collector, politician, and the like. Those people will experience a bout of unemployment, but if it forces them to find a productive line of work, then it will be for the better. Finding a more productive line of work ought to be easier in a much less encumbered economy.

Keep in mind that, Fed monetization aside, government debts compete with the private sector for capital. The government may take the money and pay for a bunch of unproductive people to sit on the border all day. This may or may not aid in consumption, but it is unequivocally harmful to a productive economy. It is production that grows an economy, not consumption. Forcing some people to pay for other people to be unproductive does not help an economy, and eliminating such government programs will not damage the economy. If the money was instead used in the private sector, maybe the unstolen tax money would be used to build a factory and the would-be border patrol agents instead could manufacture widgets.

Zippyjuan
03-31-2011, 07:00 PM
Thank you for the correction on the numbers. I just quickly looked a the figure of a $1.4 trillion deficit for 2010 which agreed with what I said earlier. I admitedly did not scan down the page further. The differences you point out are not terribly significant with the size of the numbers. ($1.2 trilllion vs $0.92 trillion or being off by $100 billion on corporate revenue in a $3.5 trillion dollar budget). Projected deficit for 2011 was $1.7 trillion. I also did not assume to cut Medicare/ Medicaid as you do which is fine if you want to cut it and save some money for the DOD. Should a polititian propose to slash Social Security and Medicare by 50% in one year (to achieve Schiff's goal of a balanced budget in one year), they would be immediately voted out of office in the following election.

I do disagree with your optomistic view of cuts of that magnitude having minimal to no impact on the overall economy. New jobs may get created in the long term but would take many years. How long is it taking to replace the jobs vacated since 2008? Has that had "no impact on GDP" that corporations made the cuts they did? That should free up people and capital to create new jobs, right? The government cutting enough jobs to reduce spending by $1.7 trillion has the exact same impact on the economy as businesses cutting the same number. The result is people losing jobs and those people having $1.7 trillion less to spend supporting other jobs. You still have thousands if not millions suddenly losing their income. Yes, the Treasury will not have to borrow an additional $1.7 trillion they would have otherwise which should lower the cost of borrowing for others, but if all those people lost their jobs, demand for goods would drop significantly and business would have no reason to create more new jobs. Companies already are showing huge profit increases have more money available to invest since the collapse in 2008- but they are not adding more jobs or increasing investment. Why? Demand does not yet justify it. They won't build a widget factory in Wisconsin unless they believe they can sell all their widegets. Businesses have and have had access to adequate capital if they wanted to invest and hire more people- they just don't see the incentive to do so until their sales pick up enough. Freeing up more capital by laying off millions of government workers will not get them to use it any more than they do now- in fact they most likely would take the opposite tract. Fearning these people not buying stuff from them, they will probably reduce their investments and payroll- expecting lower sales in the future.

enoch150
04-02-2011, 02:23 PM
I don't think so. There is an infinite amount of work to be done and at the right price there is a market for everything. That includes labor. Some companies may have a lot of cash, but if they aren't hiring, it's because the work the company wants done isn't worth the minimum wage demanded by government. Schiff wants to eliminate the minimum wage.

Zippyjuan
04-02-2011, 02:43 PM
Let us try a small scale example and see what may happen. You work for a company and you have a buddy out of work. We will use this one company to represent all companies and you to represent those with jobs and your friend to represent those without one. Let us say that you agreed to cut your wages in half so your buddy could have a job. Very kind of you. Will your business experience an increase in sales? No. The money consumers have to spend did not increase- it is just divided between two people now. Your buddy does have more money to spend (he had none previously) but your money to spend was cut in half so you are now buying half as much from the company. Your buddy got a job but other than that, the net gain to the economy was zero. Sales at the company are not going to double because this happened. Are you willing to take a pay cut so that the laid off government workers can have a job?

Ford makes a profit off each car they sell, but if they can only sell a certain amount of them they are not going to make more than that. Companies are not hiring because they aren't selling enough goods to be worth hiring more people- even at lower wages. And lowering wages means that people have even less money to buy the goods so demand is even lower.

lx43
04-02-2011, 06:39 PM
I wish they would abolish the personal and corporate income taxes totally and not replace it with anything. Starve the beast!

thetruthhurtsthefed
04-02-2011, 10:07 PM
Zippy.....what is NEVER going to be paid-down is the interest on the fiat paper printed! Hence fed income tax. Therefore, abolish the fed = zero interest on fiat paper it "produces" = zero income tax (to payback the interest on the fiat paper)=you and I going home with what we labored for/earned!
of the 3 years on this site I cannot figure out where you stand. You are kinda all over the place politically especially on foreign affairs. Are you collecting IP's?

Zippyjuan
04-03-2011, 05:51 PM
Which "interest on fiat paper" are you refering to? If you mean the interest on the debt you are right- that won't go away until the debt goes to zero which I don't expect to ever happen. The debt is produced by the Congress spending more money than they take in and then they have to have the Treasury issue debt to borrow the difference. If you get rid of the Fed, they can still borrow money so that will not solve the debt problem. That won't stop the govenment from borrowing or taxing. As long as you have ANY sort government they will have to borrow and/or tax to pay for it.

heavenlyboy34
04-03-2011, 06:20 PM
Which "interest on fiat paper" are you refering to? If you mean the interest on the debt you are right- that won't go away until the debt goes to zero which I don't expect to ever happen. The debt is produced by the Congress spending more money than they take in and then they have to have the Treasury issue debt to borrow the difference. If you get rid of the Fed, they can still borrow money so that will not solve the debt problem. That won't stop the govenment from borrowing or taxing. As long as you have ANY sort government they will have to borrow and/or tax to pay for it.

Rothbard proposed repudiating the debt (http://www.lewrockwell.com/rothbard/rothbard190.html). What say you?

low preference guy
04-03-2011, 06:41 PM
Rothbard proposed repudiating the debt (http://www.lewrockwell.com/rothbard/rothbard190.html). What say you?

I say do it.

heavenlyboy34
04-03-2011, 06:54 PM
Which "interest on fiat paper" are you refering to? If you mean the interest on the debt you are right- that won't go away until the debt goes to zero which I don't expect to ever happen. The debt is produced by the Congress spending more money than they take in and then they have to have the Treasury issue debt to borrow the difference. If you get rid of the Fed, they can still borrow money so that will not solve the debt problem. That won't stop the govenment from borrowing or taxing. As long as you have ANY sort government they will have to borrow and/or tax to pay for it.

Or, the people who want government can donate to it. The treasury has a program in which people can make "patriotic" donations. This way, those who want government can fund it, and the rest of us can keep our money. (assuming a voluntaryist paradigm, of course)

Zippyjuan
04-03-2011, 10:47 PM
Rothbard proposed repudiating the debt (http://www.lewrockwell.com/rothbard/rothbard190.html). What say you?

Most of the debt is held by retirement funds. Repudiating debt does not just hit China and Japan. But if you did want to destroy the dollar and wreck the economy, that would be a good way to go about it.

low preference guy
04-03-2011, 10:54 PM
Most of the debt is held by retirement funds. Repudiating debt does not just hit China and Japan. But if you did want to destroy the dollar and wreck the economy, that would be a good way to go about it.

On the other hand, if you pay your debt with printed money you also destroy the dollar. If you want to pay it by raising taxes, you destroy the economy. So I don't think destroying the dollar is a consequence of defaulting alone.

enoch150
04-06-2011, 02:56 PM
Let us try a small scale example and see what may happen. You work for a company and you have a buddy out of work. We will use this one company to represent all companies and you to represent those with jobs and your friend to represent those without one. Let us say that you agreed to cut your wages in half so your buddy could have a job. Very kind of you. Will your business experience an increase in sales? No. The money consumers have to spend did not increase- it is just divided between two people now. Your buddy does have more money to spend (he had none previously) but your money to spend was cut in half so you are now buying half as much from the company. Your buddy got a job but other than that, the net gain to the economy was zero. Sales at the company are not going to double because this happened. Are you willing to take a pay cut so that the laid off government workers can have a job?

Ford makes a profit off each car they sell, but if they can only sell a certain amount of them they are not going to make more than that. Companies are not hiring because they aren't selling enough goods to be worth hiring more people- even at lower wages. And lowering wages means that people have even less money to buy the goods so demand is even lower.

The government worker is paid for by the productive private sector worker. At the start of that scenario, you have one worker making, say, two cars, and the other person is just a leech off of the productive worker (either on welfare or working for the government). If the government leech suddenly got a job as a productive private sector worker (each at half the wage) several things would happen. First, there would be 4 cars produced instead of two. The cars would cost less, since the worker wage per car was cut in half, and also cars would become less scarce, which would squeeze the profit margin. Ford does not strictly sell domestically. The excess cars would be more competitively exported. So Ford may take a hit in profit margins, but it gains in volume. Also, the productive worker would no longer be paying the leech's salary.

On a net basis, yes, the total pre-tax wages paid would be the same. But between the reduced labor cost for the cars lowering the final price of the car, the reduced burden of supporting a non-productive leech, and the increase in cars produced, the economy is better off. Remember what wealth is. Wealth is not those little green pieces of paper. Wealth is stuff. More cars means more wealth.