This is almost incoherent. I said use the RATES of 1993. The economic reality of 1993 was better than the economic reality of today. The Deficit situation was better then as well... and part of this recovery in 1993 was due to the higher tax rates. If we went to 1993 and kept many of the deductions, which is EXACTLY what I'm saying, so save the '800%' argument, that would be a more rational and equitable code.
Even just with rates, you are talking about a 50% hike on the bottom bracket, vs a 13% hike on the top
Which after deductions would still amount to a much more significant effective hike on the folks you claim are stretched to their limits at 3x the legal poverty threshold

You talk about your savings rates as if they show ANY correlation or pattern to your argument.
A quick LOOK at the graph shows that the early 1980's had the highest savings rates... during a recession and higher inflation. The late 2000's had the lowest due to the housing bubble. What does this have to do with, not just your argument, but, ANYTHING![]()
The point was to show our spending habits have been thrown in the bushes
You just proved my point
1980s we had a recession... people hunkered down, curbed their spending, deleveraged, saved more
We are in a recession now... consumer spending is still high... people are taking on more debt... and then claiming they can't afford higher taxes and that the rich need to pay "their fair share"
:biggaplease:The last time saving rates was this low was around 9/11 and after the dot com bust... that was the start of the decline. Before that savings rates rarely dipped below 5%, including several recessions, one of which was just as bad as what we're in now


don't use me to get your point accross. I think both of you make compelling points. Most families should be able to pay some income tax. But when it comes to reducing the deficit, and repairing the economy the problem and solution lies with the rich. As broke said the only income growth this country has seen in a long time is with the rich. Middle class salaries haven't budged, yet costs have gone through the roof. The reason people can't save as much now is because more of their money is going to gas, milk, etc.
Now you sound like Ron Paul. People are not going to stop investing in the U.S. if we delay spending cuts by a few months or a year. We have double the gross domestic output of the 2nd place nation in the world. Nobody else issues dollars but the U.S. and we can keep producing them infinitely and they are the world's reserve currency. The demand for our currency inundates the whole world. That's why we haven't seen the inflation you'd expect despite the Fed expanding the money supply by the trillions.