Sparta
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Too many variables - the housing and baby boom of the 50's. The manufacturing capability (which we do not have now!) was able to shift to consumer goods- which SHOT UP in demand because of MILLIONS of returning soldiers with money to spend and a variety of new things, appliances, homes, cars, and businesses to buy/invest in.
How great would the boom have been with even a marginally lower tax rate? I predict far, far greater with more tech advances.
How does this post make sense to you? In one paragraph you dismiss that whole argument by saying "too many variables" than in the last sentence you say with a lower tax rate, the whole economic boom would've been far greater and America would be more technologically advanced. With just tax cuts.
You're also completely ignoring the fact that those millions of soldiers coming home were being paid by the government, the very government which also reignited the manufacturing industry for the war, and since the weight of manufacturing shifted wartime materials to consumer products, that massive economic boom all happened because of that huge amount of deficit spending by the government.
You can't say the stimulus wont work because you don't have the manufacturing ability now, when the U.S. was in The Great Depression and had around 19% unemployment at the start of WW2, yet rebuilt the entire manufacturing industry and turned everything around in the face of the worst possible economic circumstances. With the right stimulus and enough deficit spending, you will come out this above board.
Look at Australia and what we did to get out of the recession. When the Rudd government instituted the economic stimulus package, the first part of it was handing out (no joke) cheques to a large percentage of the population to go and spend as it pleased, followed by investments and tax breaks for small businesses (the second part is what the Obama Administration wants to do now and wanted to do with that previously mentioned stimulus bill that the Republicans knocked back).
The Liberal Opposition here opposed the stimulus package because they were worried about deficits and debt, saying
BBC said:Opposition leader Malcolm Turnbull had said the government was treating parliament with "disingenuous contempt", accusing it of refusing to negotiate a less expensive package.
And if they got their way, we wouldn't have been the first industrial country to recover from the recession.
BBC said:But business leaders had expressed their frustration at the Senate's earlier rejection of the stimulus plan.
"No other nation's parliament has refused a major stimulus package in the current environment of unprecedented global economic downturn," said the Australian Chamber of Commerce and Industry.
Tax cuts are not a cure all and there is literally no possible way that the Republicans will solve the recession by reducing the deficit and trying the balance the budget and all historical examples suggest that doing this will make it worse.
There is little evidence that supply-side economics (Reaganomics) works, meanwhile there is a huge amount of real world examples of countries and government employing Keynesian economics to turn things around, that actually worked.