Other Economic Schools of Thought, Foreign Economic Relations - United States, Economic Policies in the United States, Macroeconomics - General & Miscellaneous, Governmental Finances & Fiscal Policies, Competition - Economics, United States - Internationa
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Editorials
Publishers Weekly -
In this chatty, arguable, wide-ranging economic survey, former Reagan Commerce Department undersecretary Ortner scorns ``doomsaying'' critics of the $22 trillion U.S. national debt. ``We owe it to ourselves,'' he claims, referring to Treasury bonds and notes whose interest payments contribute massively to personal and institutional income. Elsewhere, however, he writes that reducing federal programs could ``raise'' billions for the government but does not refer to the employment or taxable purchasing power thus lost to the programs' beneficiaries. The author also analyzes American productivity, labor costs, dollar-value fluctuations, etc. in relation to our ``real'' (inflation-adjusted) annual industrial growth rates and our currently negative foreign-trade balance. Among Ortner's recommendations for the 1990s are a national sales tax, reduced capital gains taxes to encourage productivity-aimed investment and including the U.S.S.R. in our foreign aid program. (July)Book Details
Published
June 1, 1990
Publisher
McGraw-Hill Inc.,US
Pages
300
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9781556232800