> Concern over these tax hikes are already holding shoppers back.
> During the holiday shopping season, between Oct. 30 to Dec. 24, shoppers spent just 0.7% more than they did last year, according to a MasterCard Advistors SpendingPulse report released last week.
Has anyone stopped to consider that maybe we should stop wasting so much money during the holiday season? I thought that Christmas was supposed to be about spending time with loved ones, not about blowing thousands of dollars on unnecessary gifts. All the consumerization of the holiday season does now is funnel more money to Chinese factories. Only a fraction of the revenue goes to retail workers in America.
Ideally, that extra payroll tax money would be used for constructive purposes, such as rebuilding badly worn-out infrastructure, which could also put countless unskilled laborers in America back to work. But we all know it'll most likely be wasted on killing more Arabs or on corporate welfare, thanks to constant lobbying and large campaign donations from big business and the military-industrial complex.
> I thought that Christmas was supposed to be about spending time with loved ones, not about blowing thousands of dollars on unnecessary gifts.
Did you really? I guess that means you don't have kids.
> Has anyone stopped to consider that maybe we should stop wasting so much money during the holiday season?
Actually lots of people, since before Dickens, and often with ironic reference to the basic moral tenets of Christianity. And yet here we are. Like the Diamond Jubilee of Queen Elizabeth II, it is what it is.
> more money to Chinese factories ... killing more Arabs or corporate welfare
You seem to be saying that on the one hand, workers don't know how to spend their pay while on the other hand, neither does the government. So perhaps 'ideally' it's not such a bad thing to have the money end up in a part of the world where millions of people a year are actively raising themselves out of poverty on the back of export demand.
> Did you really? I guess that means you don't have kids.
No, I don't. But I don't see how that's important. When I was a kid, I didn't receive extravagant presents, despite growing up in an upper-middle class family that could have easily afforded them without going into debt. I received useful presents, usually something that I practically needed or something constructive, such as new clothes or books.
> Actually lots of people, since before Dickens, and often with ironic reference to the basic moral tenets of Christianity.
Dense works of literature (or their film adaptions) clearly aren't an effective way of reaching the masses. Then again, perhaps most people are just too stupid to get the message, or too afraid of being the first to break social convention.
> You seem to be saying that on the one hand, workers don't know how to spend their pay while on the other hand, neither does the government.
Correct. But while people will (probably) always be stupid, I believe the government can and should be reformed so that it is more responsive to the needs of the people and less responsive to lobbyists and campaign donors.
From a human perspective. Money really isn't "wasted" during the holiday season. Most of money is spend on your family as gifts anyways. As a kid, Christmas + birthdays were looked forward to because that when you got the toys you wanted for the entire year.
Everyone knew that the 2% cut in the Social Security tax was a temporary measure designed to boost the economy. The fact that it's expiring as planned is not a surprise, and hardly newsworthy.
Everybody knew that the Bush top-bracket rate cuts were temporary, too. And yet the entire argument revolves around extending them. Nobody is arguing that we should extend the lower rates on payroll. That is remarkable.
Add to this temporary spending programs. GWBush's last year added ~$1 trillion in "emergency" spending, growing federal spending by an astounding ~50%, and SOMEHOW four years later it's turned into entitlements and the like, part of the permanent spending baseline.
(This is the same baseline-based math which calls a reduction in the rate of spending growth some sort or another of a "devastating cut", naturally, though you'll see more ostentatious examples of this rhetoric with California's recent education-policy games than you will at the national level.)
Well, there seems to be universal agreement that the "temporary" tax cuts for the non-rich should be made permanent. With which I disagree; if we want to have an expensive welfare state and police the world, we should have the honesty to pay for it.
Unfortunately, this is wishful thinking in American politics. There is no such thing as a temporary tax cut. In the eyes of Americans, there are only two kinds of changes to taxes: cuts and raises. A temporary tax cut is nothing more than a tax cut followed by a tax hike in the view of our wisest statesmen. This gives license to pundits to accuse Obama of raising taxes--because the cuts are not permanent. I remain dumbfounded that some believe that taxes should decrease monotonically from year to year, no matter the circumstances.
That's not the point I'm making. I'm only talking about the temporary payroll tax decrease. His opponents will say that he's raising the payroll tax, when it is really only expiring.
Correct, if you already know something then it is likely not news.
I reckon most people -- myself very much included -- 1) weren't aware of the tax change in 2010, and 2) definitely didn't have its expiration on their calendars.
It's actually the thin end of the wedge for cutting social security entirely, in my opinion. Once people are comfortable with the concept of 'adjusting' social security for 'emergencies', it becomes more palatable to overhaul it entirely.
I don't think most people even knew that there was a 2% cut in the Social Security tax, much less the fact that it was temporary. I mean, let's face it: very few people follow politics with any kind of intellectual vigor. Sound-bites are easier to digest than actual details like this, which is why their coverage in the news has value.
Even if government extend this payroll tax cut, your annual raise (if such thing exist where you work) will hardly cover inflation rate (or in my case will be less then inflation rate.) So you are loosing anyway. The only way to keep up - sharp existing skills or get new ones and change jobs.
It's the spending stupid. Even with tax rates going up and the cuts going into effect, we still spend more than we take in. Cut defense 100% and tax the rich at 100%, we still are not at a balanced budget. The federal government does not have an income problem, it has a spending problem.
If you're going to make statements, rather than opinions, please base them on facts. If you cut defense 100% and make no other changes, the budget would be balanced.
2012 deficit: $1.1T [1]
2012 military budget: $1.03T to $1.4T [2]
No no no, that doesn't fit into the whole republican narrative that taxes need to be lower and spending needs to be lower. How a moderator makes the comment that guy made just blows my mind. Complete and utter ignorance.
Edit: Just noticed his name was dothemath, head explodes.
I'm a Libertarian. Even if I were a Republican, you can't argue the facts that spending is totally out of control. Can you name one country that spent itself into prosperity?
You've presented one single fact and it was incorrect. Now you're presenting an opinion.
"Can you name one country that spent itself into prosperity?"
The United States has been pretty awesome at cyclically spending a ton of money on infrastructure projects after recessions. WPA is probably one of the most successful things we've ever done. Feels like you should keep an open mind in discussions like these versus using opinions as facts.
You must be right since you got your numbers from Obama's proposed budget that did not get even one vote in the House of representatives. If you are going to accuse me of not using the facts, than why resort to that piece of science fiction? I hope you understand the budget you just posted is not the actual spending that happened in 2012. It never became law.
I don't work in HR so I'm not familiar with how companies deal with this, but I would be surprised if it doesn't hit your paycheck somehow -- directly deducting it from your current pay may be less likely than factoring the added cost into funds available for annual raises.
> Wasn't the 2% tax cut on the side the employer pays? That means if you paycheck goes down because of it, your employer is pretty much a jerk.
In the short run, this would make a difference, but not in the long run - the incidence of payroll taxes has been shown to fall almost entirely (~98%) on the employees.
(For those unaware: the incidence of a tax[1] is a way of describing who really bears the burden, which is completely unrelated to who nominally pays a tax out-of-pocket).
> During the holiday shopping season, between Oct. 30 to Dec. 24, shoppers spent just 0.7% more than they did last year, according to a MasterCard Advistors SpendingPulse report released last week.
Has anyone stopped to consider that maybe we should stop wasting so much money during the holiday season? I thought that Christmas was supposed to be about spending time with loved ones, not about blowing thousands of dollars on unnecessary gifts. All the consumerization of the holiday season does now is funnel more money to Chinese factories. Only a fraction of the revenue goes to retail workers in America.
Ideally, that extra payroll tax money would be used for constructive purposes, such as rebuilding badly worn-out infrastructure, which could also put countless unskilled laborers in America back to work. But we all know it'll most likely be wasted on killing more Arabs or on corporate welfare, thanks to constant lobbying and large campaign donations from big business and the military-industrial complex.