> Prince Valliant wrote:
>    I was sad to see taxes being one of the big reasons the people who did
> vote for bush did so.  And how happy they were as he was basically tanking
> our economy and the bit of savings we had managed to magically

Well ... things aren't so bad.  But DESPITE Bush and his sycophants
not because of them:

----------------------------
Tax Tidal Wave
October 6, 2006; Page A14

Congress keeps breaking the Beltway Book of World Records for spending
money, but the government will soon report that the federal budget
deficit for the just-completed 2006 fiscal year fell to about $260
billion.

What's the secret of this deficit success that you aren't reading much
about this election year? It isn't spending restraint. The federal
budget expanded to $2.7 trillion last year, a 9% increase, or three
times the inflation rate. Over the past six years the federal budget
has increased by 49.2%.
[Tax and Spend Cycle]

The main cause of the deficit decline -- 90% of it, says White House
budget director Rob Portman -- is a tidal wave of tax revenue. Tax
collections have increased by $521 billion in the last two fiscal
years, the largest two-year revenue increase -- even after adjusting
for inflation -- in American history. If you're surprised to hear
that, it's probably because inside Washington this is treated as the
only secret no one wants to print. On the few occasions when the media
pay attention to the rise in tax collections, they scratch their heads
and wonder where this "surprising" and "unexpected windfall" came
from.

One place it has come from are corporations, whose tax collections
have climbed by 76% over the past two years thanks to greater
profitability. Personal income tax payments are up by 30.3% since 2004
too, despite the fact that the highest tax rate is down to 35% from
39.6%. The IRS tax-return data just released last month indicates that
a near-record 37% of those income tax payments are received from the
top 1% of earners -- "the rich," who are derided regularly in
Washington for not paying their "fair share."

More good news is that dividend-tax payments appear to be up as well,
even though the tax rate was lowered to 15% from as high as 39.6%. A
National Bureau of Economic Research study found that "after a
continuous decline in dividend payments over more than two decades,
total regular dividends have grown by nearly 20%" and that this
reversal happened at "precisely the point at which the lower tax rate
was proposed and subsequently applied retroactively." There hasn't
been a purer validation of the Laffer Curve since Ronald Reagan rode
off into the sunset.

As for the budget deficit, at $260 billion it is now about 2% of our
$13 trillion economy, well below the 2.7% average of the last 40
years. Most states and localities are also afloat in tax collections,
and including their revenue surpluses brings the total U.S. public
sector borrowing down to roughly 1.5% of GDP. Not too shabby given
that we're waging a war on terrorism and Congress spent $50 billion
last year on Hurricane Katrina clean-up.

Anyway, we thought our taxpaying readers might like to know how much
you've all been contributing to the falling deficit -- the best-kept
secret in Washington.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~|
Introducing the Fusion Authority Quarterly Update. 80 pages of hard-hitting,
up-to-date ColdFusion information by your peers, delivered to your door four 
times a year.
http://www.fusionauthority.com/quarterly

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