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- CNBC: Small Businesses Split on Obama Budget
2/13/12 - Portfolio: What Obama's 2013 Budget Means for Entrepreneurs
2/13/12 - CBS News: Many small business owners favor "Buffett rule"
2/9/12 - Greenville News: Poll: Small business owners’ opinions differ from big business concerns
2/9/12 - Detroit Lakes Tribune: Bill introduced to cut U.S. tax loopholes
2/8/12 - The Daily Reveille: Corporations should pay more taxes, poll says
2/8/12 - UPI: Poll: Corporations dodge taxes
2/6/12 - Huffington Post: Small Businesses Believe Wealthy And Big Corporations Not Paying Their Fair Share Of Taxes
2/6/12 - Inc.: Small Business: Tax System Favors Big Corporations & the Wealthy
2/6/12 - Minimum wage news at our BUSINESS FOR A FAIR MINIMUM WAGE website
12/24/11 - InvestorPlace: 10 Worst Countries for Tax Evasion
12/23/11 - New York Times: A Family’s Billions, Artfully Sheltered
11/27/11 - ArtVoice: The Real Looters
11/27/11 - Think Progress: Average Bush Tax Cut For 1% This Year Will Be Greater Than Average Income Of Other 99%
11/23/11 - Huffington Post: Superfail!
11/21/11 - Nationally syndicated Op-Ed: Holly Sklar, Repatriation Con Games
11/12/11 - Boston Business Journal: Small-business sympathies for the occupiers
11/11/11 - East Valley Tribune (AZ): Small business needs changes from Congress
11/10/11 - CNBC: Small Biz Owners Ask Big Business To Pay Fair Share
11/7/11 - Business News Daily: Many Large Corporations Avoid Paying US Income Tax
11/7/11
CBS Sunday Morning: A taxing debate: Who should pay more? - Features BSP member Lew Prince
CBS Sunday Morning
CBS News, Oct 23, 2011
Click here to see the video http://www.cbsnews.com/8301-3445_162-20124334/a-taxing-debate-who-should-pay-more/?tag=cbsnewsTwoColUpperPromoArea
Talk about taxing times! Even as the presidential candidates wrangle publicly over who should pay what, a special congressional committee is wrangling in private over just the same thing. The saying is "Don't tax you, don't tax me, tax the fella behind the tree." They're trying to figure out who IS the fella behind the tree? Our cover story is reported by Martha Teichner:
EXCERPT:
Here we have a super-committee, six Democrats and six Republicans, battling behind closed doors to cut at least $1.2 trillion from the federal deficit...
What's the fight about? Taxes ... whether some Americans should pay more to help achieve deficit reduction. If so, who?
And would higher taxes help or hurt the economy? Kill or create jobs?
It's a fight Occupy Wall Street has taken to the streets, in city after city.
It's a fight the Republicans have taken to the talk shows.
"I just don't believe that raising taxes in this weak economy makes any sense at all," said House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio.
Are they right? Or is President Obama, arguing for a millionaire's tax to pay for his jobs bill? You remember this?
"Right now, Warren Buffett pays a lower tax rate than his secretary, an outrage he has asked us to fix," Mr. Obama told Congress.
According to a CBS News poll out earlier this month, most Americans think millionaires SHOULD pay more. - 64% said yes, 30% said no.
This may be why: In 1980, the top 1 percent of earners in this country made 10% of total income. By 2007, they made nearly 24%.
"When you see this picture where most Americans - let me repeat, most Americans - are worse off today than they were more than a decade ago, there's only one group that is better off, and that's the people at the top," said Columbia University professor Joseph Stiglitz, who won the Nobel Prize for economics in 2001.
"And that is the only place that you can get, in a sense, in a fair way, money."
You'd expect Stiglitz to say that - he's a Democrat. He worked in the Clinton administration.
Saying practically the same thing is Michael Graetz, a professor of tax law at Columbia who has advised two Republican presidents: "Underlying the political debate is this ongoing shift for about 35 years in the distribution of income in the United States, so that the people who have done the best are the people at the very top.
"We're now talking about people who are earning a million dollars or more a year, and the idea that, you know, raising the tax rate from 35 percent to 40 1/2 percent would be such a lightning rod politically, somewhat seems preposterous to me," Graetz said, "because it's NOT going to affect the economy.
"It is obviously appropriate for people who have that much money to contribute more to the financial problems that we're all facing."
Surprised? Listen to this, from President Obama: "That's why this plan eliminates tax loopholes that primarily go to the wealthiest tax payers and biggest corporations."
And President Ronald Reagan: "We're going to close the unproductive tax loopholes that have allowed some of the truly wealthy to avoid paying their fair share. In theory some of those loopholes were understandable but in practice they sometimes made it possible for millionaires to pay nothing while a bus driver was paying 10% of his salary. And that's crazy."
Yes, President Reagan lowered the top income tax rate from 70% to 28%. But when the deficit skyrocketed - sound familiar? - he RAISED other taxes substantially.
Nobody accused HIM of class warfare.
Not seen through the prism of political and ideological gridlock, the tax issue looks a little different.
Thirty-two years ago, Lew Prince started Vintage Vinyl in St. Louis. "In a weird way, we're the classic small business," he said. "We have at the moment 22 employees, 16 of whom are full-time."
Prince doesn't buy the Republican claim that extending the Bush tax cuts for individuals making over $200,000 will create jobs.
"To me, cutting taxes to jump-start the economy is like trying to start your car by pouring gasoline on the hood," he said.
"The reason a business hires - any business, but a small business especially - is 'cause they think there will be more business if they hire someone," Prince said. "And the way to create more business, the quickest and most efficient way, is to put money in the hands of people who will spend it."
Many of whom, right now, are selling, not spending.
"I just bought a 4,000-something piece collection," Prince said. "That money's going in the gas tank, that money is helping to pay the rent for someone whose $20-an-hour factory job has turned into a minimum wage job at a fast food restaurant."