Congressional Tax Report Card from CTJ

Citizen's for Tax Justice has recently released a report card reviewing Congress' voting record on tax policy over the last six years. From the CTJ release: [The CTJ] Congressional Tax Report Card looks at the five key tax votes in the House and Senate that have produced major changes to the federal tax system, dramatically affecting tax fairness, revenues and budget deficits, plus one additional vote on an important recent tax bill that Congress narrowly rejected.

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Looking Ahead to the 110th Congress: What If? -- Pt. 1

Based on statements from policymakers, we are getting first glimpses of what Congressional fiscal policy might look like, if the Democrats capture one or both chambers in next month’s midterm elections. Potential House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) has made clear that her top fiscal priorities will be:
  • passage of the minimum wage hike
  • re-adoption of the pay-as-you-go budget rules of the 1990s
  • a long-term solution to protect the middle-class from AMT creep
  • an extension of middle-class, but not upper-class tax cuts expiring in 2010

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"Cheaper" Suburban Housing Isn't

The now-cooling housing market, which had been growing at rapid clip, priced a lot of housing outside the reach of many middle-class workers. Looking for affordable housing, a lot of families have opted to move further out into the suburbs looking for cheaper housing. This would seem like a solution to the problem of ever-increasing home prices. Maybe not (WSJ, $$): Moving to an area with lower housing costs often doesn't pay off for low-income Americans, according to a study to be released today by the Center for Housing Policy, a nonprofit research group based in Washington.

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CBPP: Lame-Duck Trap

The Center on Budget and Policy Priorities has a paper out on the lame-duck budget cuts that are nearly a foregone conclusion. In September, Congress shifted $5.3 billion that Senate appropriators planned to devote to domestic programs to the defense and homeland security appropriations bills. As a result, $5.3 billion will have to be cut from other appropriations bills the Senate Appropriations Committee has approved — bills that largely fund domestic programs — when Congress reconvenes after the election.

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FY 2006 Interest Expense up 23%

Following up on a recent blog post by my colleague Matt on interest expense, I wanted to point out yesterday's report by the Treasury that the government's net interest payments on the national debt reached $226.6 billion in FY 2006, an increase of 23 percent over FY 2005. (See the Monthly Treasury Statement, Table 9.)

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The FY 2007 DoD Approps Bill, Deconstructed

In a brilliant analysis of the FY 2007 DoD appropriations bill, Winslow T. Wheeler, Director at the Straus Military Reform Project of the Center for Defense Information based in Washington, D.C., exposes the bill's budget gimmicks, misleading program labeling, and meaningless dollar figures. The lead-in for Wheeler's article:

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Lower Deficit=Eroding Middle Class?

The President is mighty proud of the new deficit numbers. In fact, he called a press conference to say that the tax cuts he pushed have generated the surge in revenue that's partly responsible for the lower deficit this year. Hmmmmm. Well, corporate profits have gone way up, it's true. And he did cut taxes on corporate profits. There's a correlation there, for sure.

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Attention Deficit

They must think we're not paying attention. Have a look at this statement, from an editorial in the Washington Post:

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Bringing Home the Bush Tax Cuts

For anyone interested in how the Bush tax cuts have impacted individual states, take a look at this report from Citizens for Tax Justice.

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Hundreds of Economists Call for an Increase in the Minimum Wage

EPI has released a statement signed by over 650 economists calling for an increase in the federal minimum wage. As economists who are concerned about the problems facing low-wage workers, we believe the Fair Minimum Wage Act of 2005’s proposed phased-in increase in the federal minimum wage to $7.25 falls well within the range of options where the benefits to the labor market, workers, and the overall economy would be positive.

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