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U.S. History 1877-Present 13.2b: Reagan and Taxes 31 Views
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Description:
Hey, someone let us know if you see some money start to trickle down from the sky. We've been waiting a few decades, it should be here any minute.
Transcript
- 00:03
Tax cuts were the beating heart of Reaganomics. Well Reagan [Heart beating in front of heartbeat monitor]
- 00:07
believed that high taxes threatened individual freedom depressed overall [Reagan stood in front of the American flag]
- 00:11
economic growth and encouraged the government to waste money like
- 00:16
nobody's business. So in July 1981 the tax reform bill was passed. Not many [Pile of dollar bills on fire]
- 00:21
would argue with the idea that this was the single most important piece of
Full Transcript
- 00:24
legislation in Reagan's first term. Well what did it do? Well just cut federal [People walking along a beach and talking]
- 00:29
income taxes by twenty-five percent for everybody in America, Ronnie was making it
- 00:33
rain. What was a little crazy is that while he was all about tax cuts Reagan [Money raining down on a woman]
- 00:38
also was all about having a balanced national budget. Well unfortunately he
- 00:43
left office with a giant national debt. See Reagan subscribed to the ideas of an [An elephant with 'giant national debt' written on it]
- 00:47
economist named Arthur Laffer with a name like that Reagan should have known his
- 00:51
ideas were potential fodder for some really good jokes. Well Mr. Laffer [Man making jokes about Laffer's name]
- 00:56
convinced Reagan that lower taxes would actually create more tax revenue for the
- 01:00
government. How? Well if folks had more money from being taxed less they'd probably
- 01:04
go and spend their newfound riches. While this spending spree multiplied by millions people [Laffer and Reagan smiling]
- 01:09
would grow the economy, ultimately generating higher tax revenues for the
- 01:13
government. Okay that might not sound totally insane but even other
- 01:17
conservatives were skeptical of this idea take George HW Bush for example. [Businessmen drinking coffee]
- 01:22
When he was going up against Reagan in the nineteen eighty Republican primary
- 01:26
Bush Senior called Reagan's ideas voodoo economics. Not that that stopped him from [Voodoo doll appears infront of Reagan and Bush]
- 01:31
being Reagan's VP for eight years. Maybe Reagan had a secret Bush voodoo doll or something. [Bush campaigning with Reagan and his wife]
- 01:36
But it turns out that Bush was totally right to laugh at Laffer's ideas.
- 01:40
Government tax revenues remained stagnant from 1981 through 1984 and tax
- 01:45
cuts did not equal more tax money for the government. Laffer probably cried [The Capitol Hill]
- 01:50
which we'd imagine went against his laughing nature. Government budget
- 01:54
deficits got more and more out of control so much so that Reagan finally [Footage of a roller coaster]
- 01:57
had to admit defeat and agree to a series of small tax hikes, and keep in
- 02:02
mind Reagan raising taxes was like Captain Crunch get caught eating Frosted [Captain Crunch sat with a bowl of Frosted Flakes]
- 02:06
Flakes. These increases offset many of the gains individual taxpayers reaped
- 02:11
Reagan initial 1981 tax cut. Individual tax savings were further eroded by [Increases in tax outweighing gains on a scale]
- 02:16
Reagan's 1982 Social Security reform package which increased payroll taxes
- 02:21
to fund the National retirement system. Taxpayers took another head when state
- 02:25
taxes were raised to make up for the federal money Reagan wasn't sending the [Baseball bat hits an apple and it explodes]
- 02:29
states anymore. Well hey it's got to come from somewhere, bake sales of cookies
- 02:33
can only go so far. Well in the end America's total tax burden from all sources state
- 02:38
and local taxes, federal income and capital gains taxes and payroll taxes [Man in American flag shirt is weighed down by all the taxes]
- 02:43
remained basically unchanged throughout the 1980s. That extra twenty-five percent
- 02:47
everybody got back in nineteen eighty-one was steadily nibbled away the
- 02:51
government tax collectors were kind of like those little fish that eat calluses [Fish nibbling at someones foot]
- 02:55
off people's feet. So Reagan despite his reputation as a tax slasher didn't
- 03:00
significantly slash taxes for all he did however manage to redistribute this tax [Reagan dressed in a cape with a sword trying to fight tax]
- 03:05
burden significantly. How did that happen? Well he cut income taxes which are paid [Reagan falls over]
- 03:09
at a higher rate by the wealthy this meant that the total taxation rate for
- 03:14
the wealthiest one-fifth fell by about five percent, while the richest one
- 03:18
percent's rate fell by about fifteen percent. Well, it also probably meant that
- 03:22
everybody got a yacht for their birthday right? Good for them we guess but the [Yacht arrives at a birthday party with a ribbon on it]
- 03:25
inequality comes in when Reagan raised payroll taxes which are paid at a higher
- 03:30
rate by the poorer. This meant the total effective federal taxation rate for the [Builders working at a yard]
- 03:34
poorest one-fifth of american families actually increased by more than sixteen
- 03:38
percent. The idea was that she using the tax burden on the rich would allow them [People walking around a yacht]
- 03:42
to invest and to create new businesses and expand the ones they already control.
- 03:46
Then more jobs would be created and the wealth would just trickle down to the [People working in a factory]
- 03:51
lower classes. But it just never quite worked out like that as far as we can tell.
- 03:54
To be poor in the Reagan era was about as fun as a hernia operation which is to [Bird drops poop on a mans face]
- 03:59
say, that's fun not fun at all unless you like hernia operations in which case [Surgeon holding up a needle]
- 04:03
well you do you...
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