Wall Street Journal says next president will inherent a remarkable economy.
Again. Without going on for paragraphs of waxing poetic I was correct.
https://www.wsj.com/economy/the-next...onomy-7be2d059
Originally Posted by 1blackman1
The Argentine economy was remarkable too during the rein of the Kirchner's. The only thing remarkable about ours is a deficit of 6%+ of GDP (despite a YoY GDP growth rate of 2.7%!) and federal debt held by the public of 95% of GDP.
Your WSJ link describes productivity growth from technology, like artificial investment and data centers, which has been much higher in the USA than Europe. It also further highlights the importance of technology to our success: "No EU company worth more than 100 billion euros, equivalent to $108 billion, has been set up from scratch in the last 50 years, while all six U.S. companies worth more than $1.08 trillion were created in this period."
If our corporate tax rate (state + federal) were still around 40%, which it was before the Republican tax cuts, I bet a significant part of the investment in technology that's occurred in recent years would have occurred in Europe instead of the USA. The average corporate rate in the EU is 21%. The economy during the Biden administration benefited from that, more so than during the Trump years based on the NBER research LustyLad and I posted about some time ago.
And Kamala's proposed mark-to-market tax on capital gains is a great way to level the playing field with Europe. People like Bill Gates and Elon Musk are going to have a tougher time building great companies when they have to sell part of their businesses every year to pay taxes.