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Yet he voted for Trumps tax cuts for the wealthy and corporations that is estimated to cost the U.S. about $5.5 Trillion by 2029 in lost reventue. https://www.crfb.org/blogs/tax-cut-and-spending-bill-could-cost-55-trillion-through-2029

 

Kennedy is also against funding the IRS, and wants the Dems funding bill done away with. 

 

I wonder how Mr. Kennedy thinks we'll decrease the national deficit by continuously decreasing the taxes gained from the wealthiest Americans and then having a weak IRS that under collects the taxes that ARE owed to the government by hundreds of billions? 

 

We're going to fix all of this by spending cuts? Apparently not from the Military because Mr.Kennedy voted for this years record setting $820 billion defense budget. 

 

Yes, Mr. Kennedy...we know you're very concerned about the national deficit. 😆

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3 minutes ago, TexasTiger said:

Where was he during 4 years of Trump? A totally phony SOB. 

He was the Senator from Louisiana, of course.  He had some gems then too.

2 hours ago, CoffeeTiger said:

Yet he voted for Trumps tax cuts for the wealthy and corporations that is estimated to cost the U.S. about $5.5 Trillion by 2029 in lost reventue. https://www.crfb.org/blogs/tax-cut-and-spending-bill-could-cost-55-trillion-through-2029

 

Kennedy is also against funding the IRS, and wants the Dems funding bill done away with. 

 

I wonder how Mr. Kennedy thinks we'll decrease the national deficit by continuously decreasing the taxes gained from the wealthiest Americans and then having a weak IRS that under collects the taxes that ARE owed to the government by hundreds of billions? 

 

We're going to fix all of this by spending cuts? Apparently not from the Military because Mr.Kennedy voted for this years record setting $820 billion defense budget. 

 

Yes, Mr. Kennedy...we know you're very concerned about the national deficit. 😆

Unfortunately the Senate passed the spending bill in December and cut the legs out from under the House.  Over the last 3 years we have been spending too much and mostly due to the pandemic.  Time to scale back or we will be in a recession or a stagnant economy.

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2 hours ago, CoffeeTiger said:

Yet he voted for Trumps tax cuts for the wealthy and corporations that is estimated to cost the U.S. about $5.5 Trillion by 2029 in lost reventue. https://www.crfb.org/blogs/tax-cut-and-spending-bill-could-cost-55-trillion-through-2029

 

Kennedy is also against funding the IRS, and wants the Dems funding bill done away with. 

 

I wonder how Mr. Kennedy thinks we'll decrease the national deficit by continuously decreasing the taxes gained from the wealthiest Americans and then having a weak IRS that under collects the taxes that ARE owed to the government by hundreds of billions? 

 

We're going to fix all of this by spending cuts? Apparently not from the Military because Mr.Kennedy voted for this years record setting $820 billion defense budget. 

 

Yes, Mr. Kennedy...we know you're very concerned about the national deficit. 😆

Tax cuts were for everyone.  

Good on him.

Hasn't the treasury been taking in record income?

Def not by cutting defense.  China and Russia could still cause some trouble.

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2 hours ago, Son of A Tiger said:

I like Sen. Kennedy. He is a very educated guy with a sense of humor.

He pretends like he can’t find his alma mater (Oxford) on a map in a cynical attempt to relate to his base.

19 hours ago, jj3jordan said:

Tax cuts were for everyone.  

Good on him.

Hasn't the treasury been taking in record income?

Def not by cutting defense.  China and Russia could still cause some trouble.

Are you deliberately ignorant?

Trump’s tax cuts helped billionaires pay less than the working class for first time

Economists calculate richest 400 families in US paid an average tax rate of 23% while the bottom half of households paid a rate of 24.2%

 

Oh, and since you undoubtedly didn't know:

https://www.washingtonpost.com/business/2021/01/14/trump-legacy-national-debt-increasee/

Trump’s most enduring legacy could be the historic rise in the national debt

It rose almost $7.8 trillion during his time in the White House — approaching World War II levels, relative to the size of the economy. This time around, it will be much harder to dig ourselves out.

 

 

Edited by homersapien
  • Facepalm 1
3 hours ago, homersapien said:

Are you deliberately ignorant?

Trump’s tax cuts helped billionaires pay less than the working class for first time

Economists calculate richest 400 families in US paid an average tax rate of 23% while the bottom half of households paid a rate of 24.2%

 

Oh, and since you undoubtedly didn't know:

https://www.washingtonpost.com/business/2021/01/14/trump-legacy-national-debt-increasee/

Trump’s most enduring legacy could be the historic rise in the national debt

It rose almost $7.8 trillion during his time in the White House — approaching World War II levels, relative to the size of the economy. This time around, it will be much harder to dig ourselves out.

 

 

I believe every year from 2013-2020 was a record high revenue.

A billion @ 23%=$230,000,000

$100,000 @ 24%= $24,000.

$10,000 @ 24%= $2400. (These guys would pay even less, probably $0.)

 

One guy paid more taxes.

Lame attempt at percentage trickeration even for you homer.

You can’t tax into prosperity, only to poverty.

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1 hour ago, jj3jordan said:

I believe every year from 2013-2020 was a record high revenue.

A billion @ 23%=$230,000,000

$100,000 @ 24%= $24,000.

$10,000 @ 24%= $2400. (These guys would pay even less, probably $0.)

 

One guy paid more taxes.

Lame attempt at percentage trickeration even for you homer.

You can’t tax into prosperity, only to poverty.

Hey, you are the one using percentage "trickeration", not me. That's pretty laughable. And to be honest, I don't even understand your logic - if any - of presenting such hypotheticals.

Are you trying to make the point that billionaires paying a lesser rate than people making $100,000 or less is fair? 

Or that the tax reduction for rich people had no effect on revenues? 

Can you explain it your point? 

Meanwhile, I'll add the rest of the article I referenced, since you obviously didn't read it:

----------------

One of President Donald Trump’s lesser-known but profoundly damaging legacies will be the explosive rise in the national debt that occurred on his watch.

The financial burden that he’s inflicted on our government will wreak havoc for decades, saddling our kids and grandkids with debt.

The national debt has risen by almost $7.8 trillion during Trump’s time in office. That’s nearly twice as much as what Americans owe on student loans, car loans, credit cards and every other type of debt other than mortgages, combined, according to data from the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. It amounts to about $23,500 in new federal debt for every person in the country.

The growth in the annual deficit under Trump ranks as the third-biggest increase, relative to the size of the economy, of any U.S. presidential administration, according to a calculation by Eugene Steuerle, co-founder of the Urban-Brookings Tax Policy Center. And unlike George W. Bush and Abraham Lincoln, who oversaw the larger relative increases in deficits, Trump did not launch two foreign conflicts or have to pay for a civil war.

Economists agree that we needed massive deficit spending during the coronavirus crisis to ward off an economic cataclysm, but federal finances under Trump had become dire before the pandemic. That happened even though the economy was booming and unemployment was at historically low levels. By the Trump administration’s own description, the pre-pandemic national debt level was already a “crisis” and a “grave threat.”

The combination of Trump’s 2017 tax cut and the lack of any serious spending restraint helped both the deficit and the debt soar. So when the once-in-a-lifetime viral disaster slammed our country and we threw more than $3 trillion into pandemic-related stimulus, there was no longer any margin for error.

Our national debt has reached immense levels relative to our economy, nearly as high as it was at the end of World War II. But unlike 75 years ago, the massive financial overhang from Medicare and Social Security will make it dramatically more difficult to dig ourselves out of the debt ditch.

Falling deeper into the red is the opposite of what Trump, the self-styled “King of Debt,” said would happen if he became president. In a March 31, 2016, interview with Bob Woodward and Robert Costa of The Washington Post, Trump said he could pay down the national debt, then about $19 trillion, “over a period of eight years” by renegotiating trade deals and spurring economic growth.

After he took office, Trump predicted that economic growth created by the 2017 tax cut, combined with the proceeds from the tariffs he imposed on a wide range of goods from numerous countries, would help eliminate the budget deficit and let the United States begin to pay down its debt. On July 27, 2018, he told Fox News’s Sean Hannity, “We have $21 trillion in debt. When [the 2017 tax cut] really kicks in, we’ll start paying off that debt like it’s water.”

Nine days later, he tweeted, “Because of Tariffs we will be able to start paying down large amounts of the $21 trillion in debt that has been accumulated, much by the Obama Administration.”

That’s not how it played out. When Trump took office in January 2017, the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office was projecting that federal budget deficits would be 2 to 3 percent of our gross domestic product during Trump’s term. Instead, the deficit reached 3.8 percent of GDP in 2018 and 4.6 percent in 2019.

There were multiple culprits. Trump’s tax cuts, especially the sharp reduction in the corporate tax rate to 21 percent from 35 percent, took a big bite out of federal revenue. The CBO estimated in 2018 that the tax cut would increase deficits by about $1.9 trillion over 11 years.

Meanwhile, Trump’s claim that increased revenue from the tariffs would help eliminate (or at least reduce) our national debt hasn’t panned out. In 2018, Trump’s administration began hiking tariffs on aluminum, steel and many other products, launching what became a global trade war with China, the European Union and other countries.

The tariffs did bring in additional revenue. In fiscal 2019, they netted about $71 billion, up about $36 billion from President Barack Obama’s last year in office. But although $36 billion is a lot of money, it’s less than 1/750th of the national debt. That $36 billion could have covered a bit more than three weeks of interest on the national debt — that is, had Trump not unilaterally decided to send a chunk of the tariff revenue to farmers affected by his trade wars. Businesses that struggled as a result of the tariffs also paid less in taxes, offsetting some of the increased tariff revenue.

By early 2019, the national debt had climbed to $22 trillion. Trump’s budget proposal for 2020 called it a “grave threat to our economic and societal prosperity” and asserted the United States was experiencing a “national debt crisis.” However, that same budget proposal included substantial growth in the national debt.

By the end of 2019, the debt had risen to $23.2 trillion and more federal officials were sounding the alarm. “Not since World War II has the country seen deficits during times of low unemployment that are as large as those that we project — nor, in the past century, has it experienced large deficits for as long as we project,” Phillip Swagel, director of the CBO, said in January 2020.

Weeks later, the coronavirus crisis erupted and made the financial situation far worse. As of Dec. 31, 2020, the national debt had jumped to $27.75 trillion, up 39 percent from $19.95 trillion when Trump was sworn in. The CBO had predicted less than a year earlier that it would take until 2030 The government ended its 2020 fiscal year with the portion of the national debt owed to investors, the metric favored by the CBO, around 100 percent of GDP.to reach that approximate level of debt. Including the trillions owed to various governmental trust funds, the total debt is now about 130 percent of GDP.

Normally, this is where we’d give you Trump’s version of events. But we couldn’t get anyone from the White House to give us Trump’s side. Judd Deere, a White House spokesman, referred us to the Office of Management and Budget, which is a branch of the White House.

OMB didn’t respond to our requests. The Treasury Department directed us to comments made by OMB Director Russell Vought in October, in which he predicted that as the pandemic eases and economic growth rebounds, the “fiscal picture” will improve. The OMB blamed legislators for deficits when Trump submitted his proposed 2021 budget: “Unfortunately, the Congress continues to reject any efforts to restrain spending. Instead, they have greatly contributed to the continued ballooning of Federal debt and deficits, putting the Nation’s fiscal future at risk.”

Still, the deficit growth under Trump has been historic. Steuerle, of the Tax Policy Center, has done a comparison of every American president using a metric called the “primary deficit.” It’s defined as the deficit minus interest costs, because interest is the only budget expense that presidents and Congress can’t control unless they want to do the unthinkable and default on the debt. Steuerle examined the records of 45 presidents to see how, as of the final year of their administrations, the primary deficit had shrunk or grown relative to the size of the economy.

Trump had the third-biggest primary deficit growth, 5.2 percent of GDP, behind only George W. Bush (11.7 percent) and Abraham Lincoln (9.4 percent). Bush, of course, not only passed a big tax cut, as Trump has, but also launched two wars, which greatly inflated the defense budget. Lincoln had to pay for the Civil War. By contrast, Trump’s wars have been almost entirely of the political variety.

Our national debt is now at its highest level relative to our economy since the end of World War II. After the war ended, the extraordinary military expenses disappeared, a postwar recovery began and the debt began to fall rapidly relative to the size of the economy.

But that’s not going to happen this time. When World War II ended 75 years ago, Social Security was in its infancy and Medicare didn’t exist. Today, many of our biggest and most rapidly growing expenses, especially Social Security and Medicare, are baked into the budget because of our nation’s aging population. These outlays are slated to rise sharply. Steuerle recently calculated that Social Security, health-care and interest costs are projected to absorb 122 percent of the total growth in federal revenue from 2019 to 2030.

What’s more, our investment in the future — things like research and development, education, infrastructure and workforce training — is declining as a proportion of the budget. OMB data shows that in 1970, mandatory spending (such as Social Security and Medicare, but not including interest on the debt) and investment each made up around 30 percent of total federal spending. But as of 2019, the most recent year for which data is available, mandatory spending had doubled to around 61 percent of total federal spending, while investment fell by more than half, to around 12.5 percent.

Spending more and more on past promises and shrinking the proportion of spending for the future doesn’t bode well for our kids and grandkids. Had Trump done what he said he’d do and paid off part of the national debt before the coronavirus struck, rather than adding significantly to the debt, the situation would be considerably less dire. And had Trump done a better job of coping with the pandemic, the economic and human costs would have been greatly reduced.

In addition to forcing us to reduce the proportion of the budget spent on the future to help pay for the past, there’s a second reason huge and growing budget deficits matter: interest costs.

Bigger debt ultimately means bigger interest costs, even in an era when the Federal Reserve has forced down Treasury rates to ultralow levels. The government’s interest cost (including interest paid to government trust funds) was around $523 billion in the 2020 fiscal year. That outstrips all spending on education, employment training, research and social services, Treasury data shows.

Interest costs are way below where they’d be if the Fed hadn’t forced rates down to try to stimulate the economy and mitigate the impact of the pandemic. One-year Treasury securities cost taxpayers a minuscule 0.10 percent in interest at year’s end, down from 1.59 percent at the end of 2019. The 10-year Treasury rate was 0.93 percent, down from 1.92 percent.

In late December, the Fed reported boosting its Treasury holdings by more than $2 trillion from a year earlier. The increase is primarily in longer-term securities. That has kept the federal government from having to raise trillions of dollars in the capital markets, and therefore has kept longer-term interest rates way below where they would otherwise be.

But unless something changes, even the Fed’s promise to keep interest rates near current levels for several years won’t fend off future problems. Most of the government’s borrowing to fund pandemic relief has been shorter-term borrowing that will have to be refinanced in the coming years. If rates rise, so will the government’s interest expense.

Even with rates where they are, interest on the debt is already going to be the fastest-growing budget category this decade, according to the Peter G. Peterson Foundation, which tracks the issue. Annual net interest costs are projected to double in 10 years and grow so large beyond 2030 that interest will become a driving factor in annual deficit growth, according to Peterson estimates.

Listen to what Swagel, the CBO director, had to say on the subject in a report to congressional Republicans in December: “Although the current low interest rates indicate that the debt is manageable for now and that the United States is not facing an immediate fiscal crisis, in which interest rates abruptly escalated or other disruptions occurred, the risk and potential budgetary consequences of such a crisis become greater over time.”

Trump was asked about this risk during a virtual discussion with the Economic Club of New York in October. “If we have another stimulus bill out of Congress, are you worried that the entire amount of federal debt will be too large for us to pay off in a sensible way?” asked David Rubenstein, a private equity executive.

Trump answered by falsely claiming that the United States was starting to pay off the national debt before the pandemic and claimed that future economic growth would let it do so. “I think you’re going to see tremendous growth, David, and the growth is going to get it done,” Trump said.

Two months later, when Congress finally approved $900 billion of economic stimulus that is being financed with debt, Trump challenged Congress to spend — and borrow — even more. Then he went golfing.

 

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27 minutes ago, homersapien said:

Hey, you are the one using percentage "trickeration", not me. That's pretty laughable. And to be honest, I don't even understand your logic - if any - of presenting such hypotheticals.

Are you trying to make the point that billionaires paying a lesser rate than people making $100,000 or less is fair? 

Or that the tax reduction for rich people had no effect on revenues? 

Can you explain it your point? 

Meanwhile, I'll add the rest of the article I referenced, since you obviously didn't read it:

----------------

One of President Donald Trump’s lesser-known but profoundly damaging legacies will be the explosive rise in the national debt that occurred on his watch.

The financial burden that he’s inflicted on our government will wreak havoc for decades, saddling our kids and grandkids with debt.

The national debt has risen by almost $7.8 trillion during Trump’s time in office. That’s nearly twice as much as what Americans owe on student loans, car loans, credit cards and every other type of debt other than mortgages, combined, according to data from the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. It amounts to about $23,500 in new federal debt for every person in the country.

The growth in the annual deficit under Trump ranks as the third-biggest increase, relative to the size of the economy, of any U.S. presidential administration, according to a calculation by Eugene Steuerle, co-founder of the Urban-Brookings Tax Policy Center. And unlike George W. Bush and Abraham Lincoln, who oversaw the larger relative increases in deficits, Trump did not launch two foreign conflicts or have to pay for a civil war.

 

Economists agree that we needed massive deficit spending during the coronavirus crisis to ward off an economic cataclysm, but federal finances under Trump had become dire before the pandemic. That happened even though the economy was booming and unemployment was at historically low levels. By the Trump administration’s own description, the pre-pandemic national debt level was already a “crisis” and a “grave threat.”

The combination of Trump’s 2017 tax cut and the lack of any serious spending restraint helped both the deficit and the debt soar. So when the once-in-a-lifetime viral disaster slammed our country and we threw more than $3 trillion into pandemic-related stimulus, there was no longer any margin for error.

Our national debt has reached immense levels relative to our economy, nearly as high as it was at the end of World War II. But unlike 75 years ago, the massive financial overhang from Medicare and Social Security will make it dramatically more difficult to dig ourselves out of the debt ditch.

Falling deeper into the red is the opposite of what Trump, the self-styled “King of Debt,” said would happen if he became president. In a March 31, 2016, interview with Bob Woodward and Robert Costa of The Washington Post, Trump said he could pay down the national debt, then about $19 trillion, “over a period of eight years” by renegotiating trade deals and spurring economic growth.

After he took office, Trump predicted that economic growth created by the 2017 tax cut, combined with the proceeds from the tariffs he imposed on a wide range of goods from numerous countries, would help eliminate the budget deficit and let the United States begin to pay down its debt. On July 27, 2018, he told Fox News’s Sean Hannity, “We have $21 trillion in debt. When [the 2017 tax cut] really kicks in, we’ll start paying off that debt like it’s water.”

Nine days later, he tweeted, “Because of Tariffs we will be able to start paying down large amounts of the $21 trillion in debt that has been accumulated, much by the Obama Administration.”

That’s not how it played out. When Trump took office in January 2017, the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office was projecting that federal budget deficits would be 2 to 3 percent of our gross domestic product during Trump’s term. Instead, the deficit reached 3.8 percent of GDP in 2018 and 4.6 percent in 2019.

There were multiple culprits. Trump’s tax cuts, especially the sharp reduction in the corporate tax rate to 21 percent from 35 percent, took a big bite out of federal revenue. The CBO estimated in 2018 that the tax cut would increase deficits by about $1.9 trillion over 11 years.

Meanwhile, Trump’s claim that increased revenue from the tariffs would help eliminate (or at least reduce) our national debt hasn’t panned out. In 2018, Trump’s administration began hiking tariffs on aluminum, steel and many other products, launching what became a global trade war with China, the European Union and other countries.

The tariffs did bring in additional revenue. In fiscal 2019, they netted about $71 billion, up about $36 billion from President Barack Obama’s last year in office. But although $36 billion is a lot of money, it’s less than 1/750th of the national debt. That $36 billion could have covered a bit more than three weeks of interest on the national debt — that is, had Trump not unilaterally decided to send a chunk of the tariff revenue to farmers affected by his trade wars. Businesses that struggled as a result of the tariffs also paid less in taxes, offsetting some of the increased tariff revenue.

By early 2019, the national debt had climbed to $22 trillion. Trump’s budget proposal for 2020 called it a “grave threat to our economic and societal prosperity” and asserted the United States was experiencing a “national debt crisis.” However, that same budget proposal included substantial growth in the national debt.

By the end of 2019, the debt had risen to $23.2 trillion and more federal officials were sounding the alarm. “Not since World War II has the country seen deficits during times of low unemployment that are as large as those that we project — nor, in the past century, has it experienced large deficits for as long as we project,” Phillip Swagel, director of the CBO, said in January 2020.

 

Weeks later, the coronavirus crisis erupted and made the financial situation far worse. As of Dec. 31, 2020, the national debt had jumped to $27.75 trillion, up 39 percent from $19.95 trillion when Trump was sworn in. The CBO had predicted less than a year earlier that it would take until 2030 The government ended its 2020 fiscal year with the portion of the national debt owed to investors, the metric favored by the CBO, around 100 percent of GDP.to reach that approximate level of debt. Including the trillions owed to various governmental trust funds, the total debt is now about 130 percent of GDP.

Normally, this is where we’d give you Trump’s version of events. But we couldn’t get anyone from the White House to give us Trump’s side. Judd Deere, a White House spokesman, referred us to the Office of Management and Budget, which is a branch of the White House.

OMB didn’t respond to our requests. The Treasury Department directed us to comments made by OMB Director Russell Vought in October, in which he predicted that as the pandemic eases and economic growth rebounds, the “fiscal picture” will improve. The OMB blamed legislators for deficits when Trump submitted his proposed 2021 budget: “Unfortunately, the Congress continues to reject any efforts to restrain spending. Instead, they have greatly contributed to the continued ballooning of Federal debt and deficits, putting the Nation’s fiscal future at risk.”

Still, the deficit growth under Trump has been historic. Steuerle, of the Tax Policy Center, has done a comparison of every American president using a metric called the “primary deficit.” It’s defined as the deficit minus interest costs, because interest is the only budget expense that presidents and Congress can’t control unless they want to do the unthinkable and default on the debt. Steuerle examined the records of 45 presidents to see how, as of the final year of their administrations, the primary deficit had shrunk or grown relative to the size of the economy.

Trump had the third-biggest primary deficit growth, 5.2 percent of GDP, behind only George W. Bush (11.7 percent) and Abraham Lincoln (9.4 percent). Bush, of course, not only passed a big tax cut, as Trump has, but also launched two wars, which greatly inflated the defense budget. Lincoln had to pay for the Civil War. By contrast, Trump’s wars have been almost entirely of the political variety.

Our national debt is now at its highest level relative to our economy since the end of World War II. After the war ended, the extraordinary military expenses disappeared, a postwar recovery began and the debt began to fall rapidly relative to the size of the economy.

But that’s not going to happen this time. When World War II ended 75 years ago, Social Security was in its infancy and Medicare didn’t exist. Today, many of our biggest and most rapidly growing expenses, especially Social Security and Medicare, are baked into the budget because of our nation’s aging population. These outlays are slated to rise sharply. Steuerle recently calculated that Social Security, health-care and interest costs are projected to absorb 122 percent of the total growth in federal revenue from 2019 to 2030.

What’s more, our investment in the future — things like research and development, education, infrastructure and workforce training — is declining as a proportion of the budget. OMB data shows that in 1970, mandatory spending (such as Social Security and Medicare, but not including interest on the debt) and investment each made up around 30 percent of total federal spending. But as of 2019, the most recent year for which data is available, mandatory spending had doubled to around 61 percent of total federal spending, while investment fell by more than half, to around 12.5 percent.

 

Spending more and more on past promises and shrinking the proportion of spending for the future doesn’t bode well for our kids and grandkids. Had Trump done what he said he’d do and paid off part of the national debt before the coronavirus struck, rather than adding significantly to the debt, the situation would be considerably less dire. And had Trump done a better job of coping with the pandemic, the economic and human costs would have been greatly reduced.

In addition to forcing us to reduce the proportion of the budget spent on the future to help pay for the past, there’s a second reason huge and growing budget deficits matter: interest costs.

Bigger debt ultimately means bigger interest costs, even in an era when the Federal Reserve has forced down Treasury rates to ultralow levels. The government’s interest cost (including interest paid to government trust funds) was around $523 billion in the 2020 fiscal year. That outstrips all spending on education, employment training, research and social services, Treasury data shows.

Interest costs are way below where they’d be if the Fed hadn’t forced rates down to try to stimulate the economy and mitigate the impact of the pandemic. One-year Treasury securities cost taxpayers a minuscule 0.10 percent in interest at year’s end, down from 1.59 percent at the end of 2019. The 10-year Treasury rate was 0.93 percent, down from 1.92 percent.

In late December, the Fed reported boosting its Treasury holdings by more than $2 trillion from a year earlier. The increase is primarily in longer-term securities. That has kept the federal government from having to raise trillions of dollars in the capital markets, and therefore has kept longer-term interest rates way below where they would otherwise be.

But unless something changes, even the Fed’s promise to keep interest rates near current levels for several years won’t fend off future problems. Most of the government’s borrowing to fund pandemic relief has been shorter-term borrowing that will have to be refinanced in the coming years. If rates rise, so will the government’s interest expense.

Even with rates where they are, interest on the debt is already going to be the fastest-growing budget category this decade, according to the Peter G. Peterson Foundation, which tracks the issue. Annual net interest costs are projected to double in 10 years and grow so large beyond 2030 that interest will become a driving factor in annual deficit growth, according to Peterson estimates.

Listen to what Swagel, the CBO director, had to say on the subject in a report to congressional Republicans in December: “Although the current low interest rates indicate that the debt is manageable for now and that the United States is not facing an immediate fiscal crisis, in which interest rates abruptly escalated or other disruptions occurred, the risk and potential budgetary consequences of such a crisis become greater over time.”

Trump was asked about this risk during a virtual discussion with the Economic Club of New York in October. “If we have another stimulus bill out of Congress, are you worried that the entire amount of federal debt will be too large for us to pay off in a sensible way?” asked David Rubenstein, a private equity executive.

Trump answered by falsely claiming that the United States was starting to pay off the national debt before the pandemic and claimed that future economic growth would let it do so. “I think you’re going to see tremendous growth, David, and the growth is going to get it done,” Trump said.

Two months later, when Congress finally approved $900 billion of economic stimulus that is being financed with debt, Trump challenged Congress to spend — and borrow — even more. Then he went golfing.

 

Yawn. Debt has nothing to do with revenue. Different subject. But you blather on. 

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25 minutes ago, jj3jordan said:

Yawn. Debt has nothing to do with revenue. Different subject. But you blather on. 

Which begs the obvious question, what effect did the "Tax Cuts and Jobs Act" actually have on revenue.

https://www.brookings.edu/policy2020/votervital/did-the-2017-tax-cut-the-tax-cuts-and-jobs-act-pay-for-itself/

Did the 2017 tax cut—the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act—pay for itself?

 

Since you don't like to read this sort of thing, I'll provide the bottom line: No.

 

 

 

 

Edited by homersapien
  • Like 1

Inequality is extreme and,,, it is accelerating.  Naturally you would want to tax the highest earnings of the highest earners,,, less. 

The middle class has been shrinking since we adopted the Neo-Liberal economic policies.  Damn society, no one has a right to tell the 400 wealthiest Americans what to do (even if the American taxpayer bailed them out in 2008).

Our government is owned.  Our people are divided against themselves.  The wealthy have absolute control.  Only one party shows any intentions of restoring balance. 

Ultimately, inequality will lead to more violence, more crime, more misery.  Worship at the sacred cow of unregulated, unrestrained capitalism.  Does no one understand the implications of the Gilded Age, the labor movement, the Great Depression, FDR, the greatest economic expansion in human history.

Balancing the interests of society and capital is fundamental to promoting the general welfare.  It is what good government is all about.  Balance means relative equality.  If nothing else, it is what basic human decency demands.  The wealthiest people in the country should NOT be paying the least percentage of taxes, all taxes.  Every state in this country has a regressive tax system. 

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On 1/23/2023 at 4:38 PM, CoffeeTiger said:

Yet he voted for Trumps tax cuts for the wealthy and corporations that is estimated to cost the U.S. about $5.5 Trillion by 2029 in lost reventue. https://www.crfb.org/blogs/tax-cut-and-spending-bill-could-cost-55-trillion-through-2029

 

 

What's interesting about this statement is that while the CRFB projected a revenue decrease in 2019, the Department of the Treasury has reported an increase in revenue since that time. Most of the increase has happened since 2020, after the Trump tax cuts.
"Total revenue has increased from $4.05 T in 2015 to $4.90 T in 2022.1



1https://fiscaldata.treasury.gov/americas-finance-guide/government-revenue/

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29 minutes ago, aubobo said:

What's interesting about this statement is that while the CRFB projected a revenue decrease in 2019, the Department of the Treasury has reported an increase in revenue since that time. Most of the increase has happened since 2020, after the Trump tax cuts.
"Total revenue has increased from $4.05 T in 2015 to $4.90 T in 2022.1



1https://fiscaldata.treasury.gov/americas-finance-guide/government-revenue/

Can't conclude anything from that regarding the effects of Trump's tax cut.

For example, it's quite possible the increase in revenue was much lower than it would have been without Trump's tax cut. 

4 hours ago, homersapien said:

Can't conclude anything from that regarding the effects of Trump's tax cut.

For example, it's quite possible the increase in revenue was much lower than it would have been without Trump's tax cut. 

It’s also quite possible it is a direct effect of Trump’s tax cuts. Much more likely than in spite of.

repubs only worry about this when their guys are not running the debt up giving rich folks tax breaks they do not need. how many billions or trillions did trump throw on us?

20 hours ago, homersapien said:

Can't conclude anything from that regarding the effects of Trump's tax cut.

For example, it's quite possible the increase in revenue was much lower than it would have been without Trump's tax cut. 

That is indeed "quite possible."  What metrics would you use to move beyond conjecture, though?  If an increase in tax revenue isn't sufficient to say that the tax cuts were successful or not, what is your measuring stick? What is interesting is that between 2015 and 2018 overall tax receipts (inflation adjusted) were trending downward from 4.05T to 3.91T.  They started to rise in 2019 (4.0T), coincidentally after the TCJA passed, slumped in 2020 (COVID) and then after 2020 saw a dramatic increase to 4.9T.  In the last two years we have seen a nearly 25% increase in revenue.  I think it's reasonable to make the argument that cutting taxes at the individual level can increase the pie and create more revenue. 


What is amazing to me is that even with a 25% increase in revenue we are still increasing deficits.  Spending has increased by more than 25%.  Let me be clear: the Trump administration did this country no favors with regard to spending control.  But the Biden administration isn't really doing any better. 

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