New research weakens case for small business tax relief
COMMENTARY | January 11, 2012
Tax breaks for upper-income brackets are unlikely to help job creators, studies find, despite all the political rhetoric.
By Martin A. Sullivan
martysullivan@comcast.net
Next to support for the troops, nothing is more sacrosanct on Capitol
Hill than support for small business. As community leaders and campaign
contributors, small business owners have always been near and dear to
the hearts of politicians in both parties. The recession has only
heightened their stature. There were no bailouts for small businesses.
And since 2008 the stubborn persistence of unemployment has elevated
their position even more. That's largely because the unchallenged
conventional economic wisdom is that small businesses are the source of
most job creation.
The National Federation of Independent Business states on its website: "Small business has created about two of every three net new jobs in the United States since at least the early 1970s." And on its website,
the Small Business Administration claims, "Small firms accounted for
65 percent (or 9.8 million) of the 15 million net new jobs created
between 1993 and 2009." These claims are endlessly repeated on
television and in print. And both political parties are perfectly happy
to leave them unchallenged. But two new strands of academic research are
quietly shredding the idea that policies to support small businesses
hold the key to job creation.
Sunday, January 15, 2012
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