Home/Tag: federal deficit

Middle-Class Tax Increases on the Horizon

Last Wednesday’s The Hill included a comprehensive overview of the exploding spending and deficit picture and calls into question President Obama’s ability to live up to his long-held promise not to raise middle class taxes. It’s worth a look.

For the past half-year, your S-CORP team has focused on President Obama’s long-stated goal to pay for health care reform and his other spending priorities by raising taxes on American families making more than $250,000 per year, all while cutting taxes for middle-class families.

With the Federal deficit approaching $2 trillion this year, however, just how does one expand government, reduce the deficit,

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2019-02-06T17:21:57+00:00April 21, 2009|

Congressional Budget Takes Form

Lots of budget related news in recent days with implications for small business taxpayers. First, the Congressional Budget Office weighed in last week with its analysis of the Obama budget outline and estimated that the Administration’s proposals, if enacted intact, would double the overall deficit over the next ten years.mThe numbers are truly staggering and should scare any reasonable person who plans to be a taxpayer over the next several decades. Starting with a deficit of around $1.8 trillion this year —

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2019-02-06T17:22:35+00:00March 25, 2009|

Stimulus Update

The Washington Post reports that the Senate Stimulus bill is short of the 60 votes needed for it to move through the chamber. As the Post noted:

Senate Democratic leaders conceded yesterday that they do not have the votes to pass the stimulus bill as currently written and said that to gain bipartisan support, they will seek to cut provisions that would not provide an immediate boost to the economy.

The vote in the House did not help, with all Republicans and 11 Democrats opposing the House version of the package. The unified

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2019-02-06T17:22:35+00:00February 4, 2009|

Bailout Takes Center Stage

Our friends at the Treasury spent the weekend working primarily with the House Financial Services Committee to refine the Administration’s emergency plan to purchase hundreds of billions of dollars worth of mortgage backed securities.

According to Bloomberg, the scope of the proposal has expanded to include other troubled assets, including credit card debts and car loans. Members of Congress are also weighing in, seeking to add additional provisions such as limits on executive compensation and the cramdown of loan balances under bankruptcy.

The goal of these talks is to get

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2019-02-06T18:06:07+00:00September 22, 2008|