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Tax cut for the wealthy is
irresponsible
By Ralph Nader
May 28— Economic policy is taking on a
surreal appearance in Washington. President Bush has gambled
everything on a massive tax cut based on the quicksand of long-term
projections of yet-to-be-achieved budget surpluses. A bipartisan
majority in the Congress has enthusiastically endorsed the President’s
philosophy of “tax cuts cure all” with the Democratic opposition
chipping away only at the margins.
The final version of the tax cuts seems certain
to be another bonanza for the wealthy. The richest one percent
of taxpayers -- citizens with annual incomes over $375,000 --
would receive a third of the benefits of the cuts while the
bottom 60 percent of the taxpayers would get only 15 percent
of the benefits.
Leaving the fairness issue aside, the decision
to place tax cuts at the top of the nation’s economic agenda
seems unreal even in the fantasy world of Washington. It is
as if President Bush and Congressional leaders see no unmet
needs across the nation. In the real world there is a mounting
backlog of delayed solutions to national problems ranging from
health to affordable housing to a decaying infrastructure. The
ability to deal with these and other unmet needs is placed at
risk by a policy that puts tax cuts for the wealthy ahead of
investments in the economic future of the nation.
The neglect of the nation’s infrastructure --
everything from water plants to transportation systems -- is
a national disgrace that threatens not only the economy, but
the health and safety of the entire citizenry.
The American Society of Civil Engineers recently
published a report card (www.asce.org/reportcard)
that came up with a near failing grade of D+ across 12 critical
areas of the nation’s infrastructure.
Ironically, the engineers estimated that $1.3
trillion was needed in the next five years just to repair current
and looming infrastructure problems -- a sum just about equal
to the amount that President Bush plans to push out the door
in the form of tax cuts.
“Without these resources, we gamble America’s
prosperity on an infrastructure whose pipes, schools, and airports
are literally at the bursting point,” says ASCE President Robert
W. Bein, a civil engineer from Irvine, California.
Here are some of the areas that the engineers
cited as candidates for immediate action:
Roads: One third of the nation’s roads are in
poor or mediocre condition, costing American drivers an estimated
$5.8 billion and contributing to 13,800 fatalities annually.
Bridges: As of 1998, 29 percent of the nation’s bridges were
structurally deficient or functionally obsolete.
Transit: Transit ridership has increased 15 percent
since 1995 -- faster than airline or highway transportation.
Capital spending needs to increase at least 41 percent just
to maintain the system in its present condition.
Schools: Seventy-five percent of the school buildings
are inadequate to meet the needs of school children.
Drinking water: The nation’s 54,000 water systems
face an annual shortfall of $11 billion needed to replace facilities
nearing the end of useful life and to comply with federal water
standards.
Wastewater: Some sewer systems are 100 years old.
There is a shortfall of more than $12 billion annually in investment
needs of the systems.
Dams: There are more than 2,100 unsafe dams in
the US with 61 failures in the past two years.
Not only are these critical needs for health and
safety, but public monies that would go into these improvements
would provide local jobs and stimulate a slowing economy. As
Louis Uchitelle wrote May 20th in the New York Times, Democrats
used to carry the flag for critical public investments to meet
these needs, but the emphasis shifted under the Clinton-Gore
Administration to keeping government less involved and preserving
surpluses.
Uchitelle also makes note of recent polls by Louis
Harris and Associates which indicate that citizens do favor
more spending on services they want such as education, health
care, medical research, highways, police, and air traffic control.
But neither the Bush Administration nor Congress
has the courage to test the waters and do the right thing in
investing in programs that build the nation and meet real needs
of the people. It is easier to pass out candy in the form of
tax cuts than to go to the people as a community of citizens
with a real economic program for the future. The nation will
pay dearly for a White House and a Congress that dodged the
hard choices and left our country in poor repair.
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