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In my opinion, the real reason is that the politicians expect the people to actually think that the money will do a great deal of good. They have ample reason to expect this. In the past, the people have been fooled that getting a little bit of money back from the government is a great deal. Few stop to think of where that money comes from, and how it is going to be replaced. (Remember that the government operates on a a deficit, that is it spends more money than it takes in. It doesn't take Einstein to see that someone is going to have to make up for that money. Guess who it's going to be.) Since the mean family income in the US is just under $60,000, the $600 per taxpayer ($1200 per family) amounts to a one-time 2% bonus. While it will certainly help some people, it is most certainly not going to solve the economic problems facing the US today, and, if bush and the House of Representatives get their way, those too poor to pay income tax won't get a dime. Neither will many senior citizens.
The Roman emperors had a term for this type of pandering to the public. It was called "Bread and Circuses."
From Wikipedia -
"Bread and circuses" is a phrase that can criticize either government policies to pacify the citizenry, or the shallow, decadent desires of that same citizenry. In both cases, it refers to low-cost, low-quality, high-availability food and entertainment that have become the sole concern of the People, to the exclusion of matters that some consider more important: e.g. the Arts, public works projects, human rights, or democracy itself. The phrase is commonly used to refer to short-term government palliatives offered in place of a solution for significant, long-term problems.
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| Posts: 16639 | Location: Lincoln Place, Granite City, IL, USA | Registered: 06-03-02 |    |
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Diamond Enthusiast


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| Posts: 2261 | Location: Martinsville, IL | Registered: 06-03-02 |    |
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Diamond Enthusiast

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L.Rodd's link points out that money given to the less well-off gets back into the economy faster. While tax rebates are OK, therefore, it would be more effective to increase unemployment relief, for example. As Elexina points out, nobody much is going to go on a spending spree with a $1000 tax rebate; everyone can see a recession coming. The very poor, on the other hand, would have to spend the money. 'This is why in every recession since 1958, Congress has enacted a temporary extension of unemployment benefits beyond the customary 26 weeks of payments made by states. The stopgap benefits keep families afloat during times when jobs are scarce and the duration of a jobless period can lengthen well beyond six months.
The money flows quickly through a system that’s already in place—no new bureaucracy is needed to dispense it. The cash goes to people who have been directly affected by the downturn, not to those who may never really feel the pinch. That’s why the Congressional Budget Office recently rated extending unemployment benefits (along with temporarily enhancing food stamp benefits) the most efficient and effective of the ideas proposed for inclusion in an economic stimulus package.
Looking back on the experiences of long-term unemployment insurance recipients during the recession of 2001, for example, the CBO found that average family income was half of what it had been when a recipient was working. About a third of these families saw their incomes fall below the poverty line, and 40 percent lacked health insurance. Mark Zandi of Moody’s Economy.com has estimated that every $1 increase in unemployment insurance benefits generates a short-term boost of $1.64 in gross domestic product.
Unemployment insurance is such a surefire way to get money to people who will spend it immediately that, historically, it has been called an “automatic stabilizer.”
Now House Republican leaders are calling it “extraneous spending.”..
...there isn’t anything logical about agreeing that low-wage workers need a break, while somehow the unemployed do not. Unemployment insurance isn’t welfare. It’s not pork-barrel spending or any sort of boondoggle. It is designed precisely for times like these, when workers are laid off and can’t easily find new work because of overall economic sluggishness.' www.truthdig.comThe political sneakiness that Honilov asks about maybe lies in the calculation that the unemployed won't be voting Republican anyway, but relatively poor wage-earners might.
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Diamond Enthusiast


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| Posts: 2261 | Location: Martinsville, IL | Registered: 06-03-02 |    |
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Diamond Enthusiast

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If the purpose is to stimulate the economy, what does it matter who gets the cash - so long as they're poor and likely to go straight to the store with it? Worrying about who's deserving or not is just going to delay things and waste money on administration costs.
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