The Senate's Awful Two-Month Payroll Tax Extensionby Nathaniel Ward | ||||
Congress still has yet to act on an important issue: renewal of the payroll tax “holiday,” which is set to expire at the end of the year. Instead, lawmakers are playing political games. The Senate passed a temporary two-month extension of the tax break–and then left town, daring the House to reject it. (The House did reject it, holding out for at a one-year extension–a policy even President Obama favors–and some modest reforms.) The Senate’s two-month extension, The Heritage Foundation’s Alison Fraser explains, is awful policy:
The very concept of a temporary payroll tax holiday is premised on “the faulty Keynesian stimulus philosophy,” Heritage economist J.D. Foster explains. While raising taxes in a recession is a bad idea, a better solution would be to permanently lower tax rates (perhaps through a flat tax), cut spending, and slash red tape. |
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