Friday, February 06, 2009

My Man Mitt Chimes in on Stimulus

Mitt Romney has up a commentary on what he thinks of the current stimulus package and what his priorities would be for a Stimulus. Here are the principals Romney would follow:

1. First, there are two ways you can put money into the economy, by spending more or by taxing less. But if it's stimulus you want, taxing less works best. That's why permanent tax cuts should be the centerpiece of the economic stimulus.

2. Any new spending must be strictly limited to projects that are essential.

3. Sending out rebate checks to citizens and businesses is not a tax cut.

4. If we're going to tax less and spend more to get the economy moving, then we have to make another commitment as well. As soon as this economy recovers, we have to regain control over the federal budget, and above all, over entitlement spending for programs such as Social Security and Medicare.

5. We must begin to recover from the enormous losses in the capital investment pool. And the surest, most obvious way to get that done is to send a clear signal that there will be no tax increases on investment and capital gains. The 2001 and 2003 tax cuts should be extended permanently, or at least temporarily.

6. Let's exercise restraint in the size of the stimulus package. Last year, with the economy already faltering, I proposed a stimulus of $233 billion. The Washington Post said: "Romney's plan is way too big." So what critique will the media have for the size of the Obama package?

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