Sunday, November 23, 2008

"he was prepared to hold off introducing new taxes for his first two years as president."

It doesn't look like President Obama will raise taxes. Good news. They will probably wait for the Bush Tax Cuts to expire, and deal with the issue then. From the FT:

"Democratic officials made clear on Sunday that the cost of Barack Obama’s economic rescue plan would run into hundreds of billions of dollars and hinted he was prepared to hold off introducing new taxes for his first two years as president.'

This is good news. Wise Policy.

"Over the weekend, the president-elect revealed the outlines of a sweeping programme aimed at creating or saving 2.5m jobs by January 2011 through investment in infrastructure, public services and “green” technology."

I believe that infrastructure spending should be the primary thrust of the stimulus. Remember, I don't consider UI and other social safety net provisions, which are very important, to be part of the stimulus as I define it.

"Chuck Schumer, a leading Democratic senator, predicted it could be as much as $500bn-$700bn. “It’s a little like having a new New Deal, but you have to do it before the Depression. Not after,” he told ABC’s This Week."

I'm fine with the figure, but would like to see actual plans on how it will be spent.

"In an olive branch to Republicans, Mr Axelrod floated the possibility that the president-elect might wait for the Bush tax cuts to expire in 2010 rather than acting sooner to raise rates for high earners."

What to do about these tax cuts should wait until we get to 2010. Period.

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