Do the rich create jobs?

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You hear it again and again, variation after variation on a core message: if you tax rich people it kills jobs.




You hear about "job-killing tax hikes," or that "taxing the rich hurts jobs," "taxes kill jobs," "taxes take money out of the economy, "if you tax the rich they won't be able to provide jobs." ... on and on it goes.






So do we really depend on "the rich" to "create" jobs?






Or do jobs get created when they fill a need?






So is it true?




Do they "create" jobs?




Do we "depend on" the wealthy to "create jobs?"








bash%20the%20rich.bmp






http://www.truth-out.org/gop-dogma-...tually-rich-dont-create-jobs-we-do/1305380742
 
Companies don't hire new workers unless demand for their product increases.

you are so stupid...a new restaurant will hire new workers before there is any demand for its product....new companies start up all the time without demand for their services or products

kindly stop wasting our time with your idiocy
 
Human resources comprise the largest cost component of most businesses.




Businesses only hire people when they have good reason to believe that hiring will contribute to profitability.






  • Hiring and retention of employees is a pragmatic process from start to finish.




When demand is high, if a business sees that increasing production (of goods or services) is likely to increase profits, they hire.



When demand is high, wages tend to rise in response to competition for labor resources.



When demand is low, unprofitable production is cut along with payrolls.






  • Hiring is not an act of noblesse oblige by benevolent rich people, whose, goodwill must be preserved at all costs, as some would have you believe.




Businesses analyze market conditions and base staffing levels on a calculated anticipation of demand for production.



To pretend otherwise is unutterably childish.
 
no surprise dune is close minded and ignoring my posts which show how wrong he is....much easier to say PMP has a close mind all the while closing your mind to the truth
 
House Republicans who refuse to consider tax increases as part of a debt ceiling deal are out of step with most Americans, according to polls.




That's bad news for Republicans who are betting the farm on resisting Democratic efforts to raise taxes on the rich.





  • When looking to reduce debt, politicians can employ two tactics.






  • The first is to cut spending.






  • The second is to raise taxes.






  • Most budget experts say you need to do both.





But House Republicans - an overwhelming majority of whom have signed a pledge to this effect - refuse to consider any kind of tax increase, not matter who it hits.




Turns out, most Americans don't share their conviction.





  • According to Gallup, only 20% of Americans want a deal that consists only of spending cuts.






  • That's the position of House Majority Leader Eric Cantor and many of his colleagues.







Instead, most Americans want the deal to include a mix of spending cuts and tax increases, something that is much closer to the bargaining position staked out by Democrats.
















http://ac360.blogs.cnn.com/2011/07/14/republican-tax-stand-a-bust-with-public/
 
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