http://en.wikipedia.org/...enue_as_percentage_of_GDP
This would tend to suggest that different taxrates lead to different chunks of GDP; look at the continuum there! Canada takes in 32.2%, US takes in 26.9%; that's a pretty significant difference; I suspect if you adopted Canada's policies, you'd end up with similar numbers. (I believe this is more than just federal btw)
Furthermore check this out:
http://www.deptofnumbers.com/...nue-as-a-fraction-of-gdp/
that seems to suggest that tax revenues peaked (as a % of GDP) *RIGHT* before the bush tax cuts. That looks far from constant to me tbh.
All it does is discourage growth while it has no benefit of higher revenues.
This is a logical fallacy; what if you lowered it to zero? would GDP be infinite? What if you raised it to 100%? would you still only take in the same percentage? It makes no sense, and is mathematically impossible.
Wealth. The creation of wealth allows us to live better lifestyles not the creation of government programs.
Isreal, Slovenia, Portugal, Cuba, Chile, Costa Rica, Greece... these are countries you would compare with the wealth of the US? Unlikely; I think it's more that they spend enough; Lifestyle is a part, sure, but government can influence lifestyle too, and probably has a responsibility to do so.
If everyone is given more freedom, wealth will be created and everyone's boats rise with a high tide.
The problem with this, and with most republicans, is that it's always an "X is better, always!" point of view; Is there not too much freedom? What about no government, ie Anarchy; would that lead to more wealth creation, and everybody's boats rise? There is necessarily a point at which society as a whole gets worse with less governments.
How could that have happened without government programs creating an atmosphere of safety? It happened precisely because government stayed out of the way.
Just like in China; do you envy the Chinese labourer who throws themselves out of their dorm windows? Do Americans want to live like that? Safety measures save *society* a lot of money, not the corporation, unless you put in government regulations that puts the burden of cost onto the corporation, so that they have a financial incentive to keep their employees safe.
Want to feed the poor? Countless organizations do that already and again do a better job than the government. Do you know why they do a better job? Because they actually care.
So, like Canada (well alberta anyway), tax casinos & alcohol and give the money directly to charities &such organizations!
Would you agree that medicare is treating citizens better than private insurance?
TBH I don't fully understand the insurance / doctor stuff in the US, being Canadian; all I know is that when we travel there, everybody recommends buying travel insurance *because if you get hurt in the 'states, you are SERIOUSLY fluffed*; In Canada, just about anything considered essential is covered, and if it's not it's reasonably cheap (compared to anything out of the states). And most people have private insurance as well, but it's something like Blue Cross -- which for families can be had for something like $85 a month, for a well covered plan (in low income brackets-- higher income bracket you pay more, $115 or so)
I go to the doctor for things like.. being sick; I get a prescription, I walk out of the doctors office -- I don't have to pay anything; I go to the phramacy, get my antibiotics for $50-$150 (depending on how exotic it is) and I go home.
how the welfare system is set up?
The welfare system is a hard one, because I can recognize that it's horrible, but it's hard to see a better way to do it; other than perhaps giving people menial government jobs doing something like... building highways, but for minimum wage... or any other of a million things the government could employ people to do rather than just give them free money. Admittedly child care could become an issue, but there could always be exceptions or alternatives. This sort of thing is more of a fundamental change in the system though; to just drop welfare would crush inner-city america I think, which wouldn't be good for your society as a whole...
common sense to lower taxes after WW1 (which created a boom in the economy)
Hard to say exactly, when you have millions of people transferring from government employment with 0 expenditures (in the army) to private sector, + burning their cash. After world wars is never a "fair" comparison, because the market forces at work are *completely* different than normal.
In the end my logic is as follows: Keep the government small and create an atmosphere that will foster economic growth.
Your logic would be: Use government as the central pillar for economic growth and create an atmosphere for economic equality.
mmm, not quite; My logic would be... Use government as a tool to improve the health and standard of living of society as a whole.
So like, including otherwise-unprofitable research & dev, forcing changes in society through regulation (for example, encouraging higher-density living, to reduce driving and commute times and allow transit like in singapore); or, like Canada, maintaining a Health Care system that operates at 1/10th the per-capita expenditure of the US, yet with better overall results. Sure, maybe lifestyle is part of that, but that's something government regulations can influence.
If we could eliminate the income tax and sales taxes, and replace them strictly with a flat tax on assets & land holdings, while taking in the same percentage GDP, I'd be fine with that as well; just the Income tax currently favours the wealthy, as it can be used to shift the majority of the burden on to the middle class.
Most changes in the US tax system in the last 30 years have been about marginalizing the middle class; the "middle class" such as we know it has been shrinking, with more people being pushed below, and some people being pushed above; I suspect it's healthier to have a STRONG middle class, rather than larger lower class and small but strong upper class; And I would tend to use government and taxes and regulations to favour strengthening that middle -- there's a lot of tin-pot dictatorships in africa that can very clearly demonstrate why having a 100% discrepancy between your rich and your poor is a bad idea.