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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 3-page paper supports the theory penned by an anonymous philosopher: "A government that is big enough to provide its citizens with everything is big enough to take it away." The support used is President George Bush's Economic Tax Reconciliation Act of 2001. Bibliography lists 2 sources.
Page Count:
3 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_MTgovrol.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
take it away." In other words, the benevolent government that provides its citizenry with everything from good roads to paid-for health-care, can also take it all away. This
is certainly a true statement -- although governments do not take things away to be spiteful or malicious, certain factors -- such as economics -- can have a definite influence
on how much a government gives to its citizenry and how much it withholds. This has especially been true in the face
of President George W. Bushs tax cut and tax return to the U.S. population. After being sworn in as president in 2001, Bush promised he would return the surplus
in the budget to the taxpayers that had made it happen. Bush wanted to return the money to taxpayers in hopes they would spend the money, thereby stimulating the economy
(MacNeil-Lehrer, 2001). This made sense -- during the late 1990s, the economy was humming along and the federal government had collected more money in taxes that needed for its programs
(MacNeil-Lehrer, 2001). Unfortunately, by the time Mr. Bushs tax cut became law, the economy began to slow down (MacNeil-Lehrer, 2001). Corporations were making less revenue, and therefore or pay fewer
taxes (MacNeil-Lehrer, 2001). however, the law, which is called the "Economic Growth And Tax Relief Reconciliation Act of 2001," called for a
reduction in the amount of money the government would collect in taxes, meaning the amount of taxes people would pay each year would drop, allowing them to save more money
for retirement (MacNeil-Lehrer, 2001). in addition, the law is a long-term one, introduces the amount of money the government would collect in taxes by $1.35 trillion during the next decade
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