Imaginos1892 wrote:Tenshinai wrote:Cutting taxes equates to spending money you don´t have, except worse, because if a government spends money(directly from the printing press or from loans), then at least part of it gets back in the form of taxes, as well as increasing the size of the total economy, which at least to some degree can/will help an economy that is in trouble.
ARRRGH!! NO! Government can NOT increase the size of an economy; it can only increase the amount of money. If there is no increased value to back it up, all you get is inflation. The only way to increase the real size of an economy is by making things that are worth more than they cost; everything done by government costs more than it is worth. We have to expand the four primary economic functions: farming, mining, manufacturing and construction.
Cutting taxes (and government spending, which everybody seems to forget about) frees up money that can be used for productive purposes. If it is, the economy grows and the government ends up collecting more money on lower taxes. If not, the economy stagnates and everybody howls for Somebody To Fix It, NOW!
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If a business tries something that doesn't work, they either stop doing it or they will go broke. If the government tries something that doesn't work, they just keep shoveling our money into it forever.
Don't forget all of the "soft" costs of the regulations that keep getting added to year after year. Roughly about 3500 new Federal regulations are added per year (typically 300-500 new laws as well). Those regulations have both an opportunity cost (economic activity that couldn't happen because of the regulation) and a compliance burden (costs associated with following the regulations. The vast majority of this is behind the scenes at the various Federal agencies. Some of the regulations are likely to be worth the opportunity and compliance costs but not all of them. And with the sheer volume of new regulations, the only ones we ever hear about in time to oppose/support are the high profile ones. The low profile regulations have cost burdens as well, but since we never hear of them we can't make a cost/benefit analysis.
So one way to help the economy is for congress to appoint a subcommittee for each one of these agencies and have them sort though all of these piles of regulations and come up with delete lists. Given that there are 1000s of Federal laws and 100,000s of regulations (google that and discover that the situation is so confusing that no one knows how many laws and regulations we actually have) there should be large numbers that can be removed as outdated and/or ineffective.