Two excerpts:
* "For example, the data show that, from September 1992 through March 2005, firms with fewer than 500 employees accounted, on average, for 65 percent of quarterly net employment growth, representing 13.5 million out of 20.6 million net jobs created by the total private sector."
* "All firm-size classes experienced at least one quarter of negative net employment change related to the 2001 recession, but the larger size classes experienced more quarters of net loss than the smaller classes."
]]>Currently, there is no limit on the amount of tax deduction a buisness can take on health-insurance for their employees. According to the OMB, that amounted to $112 billion in lost-revenue for the federal government in 2005 alone.
Ed Lazear, the panel member heading the Fair Tax study group, started off well by listing the positive aspects of a consumption tax: encouraging savings, simplified administration, reduced tax burden, etc. Lazear also presented Treasury estimates of what the consumption tax rate would have to be to replace the government’s current income, a range of 22-26 percent.
Then he woke-up the dozing crowd. According to another set of numbers Treasury had run--figuring that Congress would eventually exempt huge swaths of the economy from taxation—-Lazear announced that the final rate would end up somewhere between 64 and 87 percent. Yes, 87 percent!
Expect to read that in the papers from this point forward.
After the bomb, panel Chairman Connie Mack (R-Fla.) went through the motions of inquiring about Fair Tax administration, but it was clear the game was over.
The President’s Panel on Tax Reform will not recommend a National Retail Sales Tax to replace the current code. While positive changes to the code may still come from the panel, an opportunity for fundamental reform has been squandered.
]]>"As you know, I’ve advocated the need for people to come together to address the Social Security issue. It’s an issue that’s not going to go away. And I’ll continue to talk about it. There seems to be a diminished appetite in the short-term, but I’m going to remind people that there is a long-term issue that we must solve, not only for the sake of the budget, but, more importantly, for the sake of younger workers who are going to either have to pay a ton of money in order to justify current benefits, or to take a look at the underlying causes of the growth of benefits and do something about it, show some political courage."
Some reporters wasted no time interpreting this as a Bush retreat from reform. Nothing could be further from the truth.
What is true is that Grow Accounts are increasingly being seen as the only way to achieve some form of Social Security reform.
Grow Accounts do not fix Social Security as they don't address solvency. But they may be necessary as a first step down the road to reform.
]]>Though not the first of its kind, this bill would be the first to be enacted if the county executive approves it rather than issuing a veto, which was the case with a similar bill in Maryland.
]]>In a terse press release, Senate Small Business Committee Chair Olympia Snowe (R-Maine) stated, "The apparent widespread abuse of loans provided through the Supplemental Terrorist Activity Relief Act is nothing short of an outrage."
]]>Estate tax repeal, long scheduled for a vote on the Senate’s first day back at work, has been postponed indefinitely; it may be the first of many changes in the coming months.
Calls for aid packages, investigative hearings and possibly a new energy bill will compete with two Supreme Court nominations, appropriations season and the reconciliation process. And let’s not forget about the ongoing Social Security debate or the President’s Panel on Tax Reform slated to drop its recommendations at the end of September.
The coming months will certainly test the elasticity of the projected legislative calendar.
]]>Hmm... Giving people information to make good decisions. Who knew??
]]>Hauge's company, Cal Insurance and Associates, recent began offering HSAs to its employees and it has done very well.
NSBA supports HSAs and applauds the Times for publishing an insightful piece.
]]>What did they learn? Nearly 12,000 Pennsylvanians contracted infections during a hospital stay in 2004, costing an extra $2 billion in care and at least 1,500 preventable deaths.
]]>Though people's satisfaction with their insurance is decreasing, a Kaiser Foundation poll earlier this year showed that 55 percent of Americans opposed a single-payer health system.