Search This Blog

Translate

Blog Archive

Middleboro Review 2

NEW CONTENT MOVED TO MIDDLEBORO REVIEW 2

Toyota

Since the Dilly, Dally, Delay & Stall Law Firms are adding their billable hours, the Toyota U.S.A. and Route 44 Toyota posts have been separated here:

Route 44 Toyota Sold Me A Lemon



Monday, August 5, 2013

The Morally Bankrupt Republicans, Corporate Welfare & Wal-Mart

How can Republicans continue to refuse to eliminate tax loopholes - Welfare for the Wealthy? continue to refuse to eliminate DIRTY ENERGY subsidies? Support the BLOATED DEFENSE DEPT. budget?  and deny Americans FOOD?

Food Stamp Cuts Twice as Deep in New GOP Proposal 02 Aug 2013 Republicans in the U.S. House of Representatives are considering a new food stamp bill that would cut nutrition assistance by twice as much as a previous bill that died on the House floor last month. The previous measure would have reduced spending on the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program by $20.5 billion over 10 years, or roughly 2 percent of the program's $800 billion cost in that time frame... A GOP aide confirmed the House [mal]nutrition working group was nearing a proposal that could cut as much as $40 billion from SNAP, but said the framework had not been finalized.



Corporate lobbyists are preparing to present arguments when Congress returns about why corporate taxes should be lowered. (The President has already indicated a willingness to lower them.) But they're lies. You need to know them so you can spread the truth.

(1) U.S. corporate tax rates are higher than the tax rates of other big economies. Wrong. After deductions and tax credits, the average corporate tax rate in the U.S. is lower. According to the Congressional Research Service ("International Corporate Tax Rate Comparisons and Policy Implications, 2011") the United States has an effective corporate tax rate of 27.1%, compared to an average of 27.7% in the other large economies of the world.

(2) U.S. corporations need lower taxes in order to make investments in new jobs. Wrong again. Big corporations are sitting on almost $2 trillion of cash they don't know what to do with. Rather than investing in expansion, they're buying back their own stocks or raising dividends. They have no economic incentive to expand unless or until consumers want to buy more, but consumer spending is pinched because the middle class keeps shrinking and the median wage, adjusted for inflation, keeps dropping.

(2) U.S. corporations need a tax break in order to be globally competitive. Baloney. Most big U.S. corporations are not really American companies at all. They've been creating more jobs abroad than in the U.S. A growing percent of their customers are outside the U.S. Their investors are global. They do their R&D all over the world. And they park their profits wherever taxes are lowest. The "competitiveness" of American companies is a meaningless term.
 
 
 
Wal-Mart on Wal-Mart:

A Wal-Mart spokesman on Monday told The Huffington Post that only 5 percent of the discount chain’s workers were on Medicaid. The spokesman was attempting to rebut Sen. Bernie Sanders’ assertion on MSNBC that the Walton family, the Wal-Mart owners, got to be the richest family in American by paying workers so poorly that they need Medicaid and food stamps to survive. What the spokesman may have forgotten to mention was that an internal memo to Wal-Mart’s board of directors (obtained by The New York Times) acknowledged that 46 percent of the children of Wal-Mart's 1.33 million U.S. employees were uninsured or on Medicaid. The 2005 memo by M. Susan Chambers, Wal-Mart's executive vice president for benefits, had more to say about how the company treats its workers:

- Wal-Mart's workers are getting sicker than the national population with preventable diseases such as obesity (p. 4). More than half of Wal-Mart's workers (p. a...re not covered by its health insurance plans, meaning many do not have access to necessary preventative care and doctors' visits. "Our workers are getting sicker than the national population, particularly with obesity-related diseases".

- Wal-Mart's workers aren't using primary care because so many of them lack coverage.
Instead, they opt to use taxpayer-subsidized emergency rooms. The Wal-Mart workforce "tends to over utilize emergency room and hospital services and underutilize prescriptions and doctor visits".

Continue reading here: http://www.sanders.senate.gov/newsroom/news/?id=248756B6-FF83-42FE-A0EB-A9D74B7E7A05

No comments: