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Originally Posted by txdot-guy
NIIP numbers can be found here as well. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Net_in...tment_position
Information that was previously unknown to me. But I think it just provides more context to support my opinion that we need to raise revenues to get out from under our deficit problems.
A 3% income tax increase across the board without other changes would only raise about 186 billion in revenue. With a deficit of 1.8 trillion we’ll have to raise revenues elsewhere including increasing the capital gains rate as well as significantly cutting spending.
In 2025 we raised $264 billion in tariff revenue which is highly regressive. As someone who is squarely in the middle class I would much prefer to see a rise in income tax revenues and capital gains than tariff revenues.
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I don't think most people realize the enormity of the problem.
As you noted, raising all the income tax brackets relatively modestly wouldn't make much of a dent in the deficit.
But raising the capital gains tax rate would make even less of a dent in the deficit. The rate now is 23.8%; increasing it to 28% (which is about what most knowledgeable students believe is the revenue-maximizing rate) wouldn't be likely to raise more than about a penny of every deficit dollar. And raising it to levels much higher than that would actually
lower revenue. (See: Policy discussions leading up the the capital gains tax cut of 1978.)
And let's get real here.
No one is going to cut spending to any appreciable extent.
Anyone remember all the caterwauling in 2011 when the new Republican House majority wanted to cut domestic discretionary spending by a couple of percentage points? Exploding media heads convinced much of the nation that stuff would start collapsing all across the land if any spending was reduced.
And do you remember what happened in 1989, when Rostenkowski got attacked by a bunch of old people at a town hall-style event when he proposed some very small adjustments to Medicare? They literally chased him into his car!
So, I'm pretty sure we're just going to run humongous deficits until some crisis forces a course correction, which it eventually will.
Unfortunately, we're a nation that's adrift with no serious leadership; acting like an alcoholic who has to "hit bottom," as they say, before seeking treatment.