Hey, X, join in!
I'm wondering, since we share a similar frame of cultural reference, if you know what the picture above represents....
Jesus cloud. I used to think he climbed in and out of heaven on a ladder from a cloud that looked like that. These were in the Illustrated Bible days.
Oh my god. We agree on something.
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I understand your position. I should have said at what point can you not cut taxes further? What is the floor of government services? And when you reach it, how do we continue to grow?
It seems to me that that it would be almost impossible to cut government services beyond the point where we break even. The amount of cut backs just to get rid of the deficit would probably send the economy into a tailspin. Am I wrong on that? That's a legitimate question, not a smarmy one.
Hey, X, join in!
I'm wondering, since we share a similar frame of cultural reference, if you know what the picture above represents....
I'm afraid you are. Economic growth has an inverse relationship with government services.
At what point can you not cut taxes further? Light years. I'd at least say to the point where you give capital no incentive to exit (edited to clarify - I really shouldn't post before coffee). It's not the point you are looking for, that's still a good ways down the curve, but that's a start. If Alabama is charging a 5% corporate tax rate, and Georgia is at 2%, do you put your widget factory in Columbus or Phenix City? It's that simple. You don't look at the number of state wildflower roadside projects or the better state run homeless shelters when making a decision. And yes, I'm oversimplifying to make a point.
So you don't believe a wee bit of regulation might have prevented the 20% May over May housing price drop that was just reported? And if cutting taxes is the way to spur growth, how do you grow and still provide the services of government and a strong defense? Further, do you not believe that some of the devaluation of the dollar can be blamed on the fact that taxes were cut and spending was increased and we now have a record deficit?
I'm afraid you are. Economic growth has an inverse relationship with government services.
At what point can you not cut taxes further? Light years. I'd at least say to the point where you give capital no incentive to exit (edited to clarify - I really shouldn't post before coffee). It's not the point you are looking for, that's still a good ways down the curve, but that's a start. If Alabama is charging a 5% corporate tax rate, and Georgia is at 2%, do you put your widget factory in Columbus or Phenix City? It's that simple. You don't look at the number of state wildflower roadside projects or the better state run homeless shelters when making a decision. And yes, I'm oversimplifying to make a point.
You also look at what kind of talent the area has to offer.
Lucifersam makes a very good point, what if Georgia has a state mandated minimum wage that makes labor higher? Maybe you ship via airline so Atlanta is a better option. I realize you were simplifying things, but tax rate isn't the only issue to look at.