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newmedman

06/28/25 7:41 PM

#532183 RE: B402 #532182

Da Fuq are you going on about now? Those countries are not self sufficient just like everyone else in the world and their populations dwarf what ours is.

https://www.nordicstatistics.org/news/turbulent-times-in-foreign-trade/
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blackhawks

06/28/25 9:33 PM

#532195 RE: B402 #532182

They 'took care of their work force' by supporting labor and labor UNIONS, not a GOP strong suit.

Let's cut the shit and cut to the chase, no matter how well the work force does the GOP will NOT raise taxes, except on the un-wealthy, because it's NOT in their f'cking DNA.

What is indisputable is that trickle down GOP economics, read the Trump BBB, don't f'ing work. That is unless recession is the goal.

Did the Clinton Tax Hike Contribute to the Growth of the Clinton Economy?

Overview of the Clinton Tax Hike

President Bill Clinton signed the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1993, which raised taxes on the wealthiest Americans, increased the corporate tax rate, and raised taxes on Social Security benefits for some recipients. The goal was to reduce the federal deficit and establish fiscal discipline. The tax increase was significant, raising federal revenues by roughly 0.5–0.8% of GDP during its early years.

Economic Performance During the Clinton Years

The 1990s saw robust economic growth, with the U.S. economy expanding at an average annual rate of about 4%, the creation of over 22 million jobs, declining unemployment, and a shift from budget deficits to surpluses. Many contemporaneous accounts and later analyses credit a combination of fiscal discipline, investment in education and technology, and opening foreign markets for these results.

Did the Tax Hike Cause the Boom?

There is substantial debate among economists and policymakers about the direct impact of the 1993 tax hike on the economic boom:

Arguments That the Tax Hike Helped:

Supporters argue that the tax increase was crucial for reducing the federal deficit, which in turn helped lower interest rates and spurred private investment.

The tax hike, combined with spending restraint, contributed to a shift from large deficits to surpluses, which many see as a key foundation for the strong growth that followed.

Conclusion

The Clinton tax hike was part of a broader strategy of fiscal discipline that coincided with a period of strong economic growth. Supporters argue it was foundational to the boom by reducing deficits and stabilizing the economy, while critics contend it slowed growth and that other factors (such as the tech boom and later tax cuts) were more important drivers.

The consensus is that the tax hike did not derail the economy, but the extent to which it directly contributed to the 1990s boom remains debated


perplexity.ai
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janice shell

06/29/25 2:07 AM

#532237 RE: B402 #532182

They can only provide the safety nets and healthcare because they took care of their work force who make good wages and that's where the tax money comes from.....Everyone is happy

Oh FFS. Healthcare and free universities are very expensive. Wildly more expensive than anything else.

And would you care to explain to me what kind of economic mix there is in Denmark? What are these wildly busy factories employing millions and millions of people?

And tell me how the development of AI will affect jobs and workers here and in Scandinavia. In the same way? I think so: AI is just a more extreme form of automation. All this has been going on since the invention of the wheel. Changes are made, and we trundle on. But being uneducated really doesn't cut it any longer.

You're so confident about how things are in places you've never even visited.