
·
How Much Is 1 Trillion Dollars? A stack of one trillion one-dollar bills would reach 68,000 miles
in space. If you spent $1 million dollars a day from the day Jesus was born
until now, you would only have spent about three quarters of a trillion.
If you laid one trillion
one-dollar bills end to end, it would make a chain from the earth to the moon
200 times. One trillion dollars would stretch nearly from the earth to the sun.
It would take a jet flying at the speed of sound, reeling out a roll of dollar
bills behind it, four years before it reeled out one trillion dollar bills. A
million seconds is 11.5 days. A billion seconds is 32 years. A trillion
seconds is 32,000 years.
·
Record Spending In The
Budget: The budget increases spending to $3.9 trillion in 2009, or 27% of
GDP – the highest level since World War II. This is simply too much spending
and will lead to higher taxes, slower economic growth, and fewer jobs for
middle class families.
·
Historically High Deficits
For The Next Ten Years: The budget promises
historically high deficits stretching out until 2019, when the budget deficit
will stand at $712 billion.
·
A Record Deficit In 2009: The budget would produce a $1.75 trillion deficit, or 12.3percent
of GDP, in 2009. This deficit level is more than three times the previous
record deficit.
·
$24 Billion Spent A Day: Over the first fifty days of the new Administration, approximately
$24 billon has been spent a day, most of it with borrowed money.
·
Doubling The National Debt
Over The Next Eight Years: The budget doubles the
national debt over the next eight years.
·
Trillion Dollar Increase In
Entitlement Spending: The budget includes a $1
trillion increase in entitlement spending over ten years. The budget
dramatically increases entitlement spending while doing very little to improve
the budget impact of existing entitlement programs.
·
Increasing Your Families'
Share Of The Debt: The current debt per capita exceeds $35,000. The budget would
double the national debt in only eight years, thus ballooning your share to
approximately $70,000.
·
Growing The Debt At Record
Pace: During the last eight
years, the debt rose by $4.9 trillion. The proposed budget will exceed that
within three years.
·
Skyrocketing Net Interest
Payments: Beginning in 2012, and
every year thereafter, the government will spend more than $1 billion a day in
net interest. By 2019, the government will spend $1.7 billion per day on net
interest.
·
The Largest Tax Increase In
American History: The budget will raise
taxes by $1.4 trillion over the next ten years.
·
Harming Small Businesses: The budget will raises income taxes harming the many small
businesses that pay taxes at the top two individual rates. According to the
National Association of Manufacturers, 68 percent of American manufacturers pay
taxes at the individual income tax rate and most of them will see their taxes
increase.
·
Higher Energy Prices: The budget will lead to higher energy prices and a tax for every
American who uses energy. The cap-and-trade proposal represents a new national
climate tax that will cost every household up to $3,128 annually in higher
costs for natural gas, electricity, home heating oil and gasoline.
·
Hurting Charitable Giving: The budget will put a new tax on charitable giving that could cost
American charities as much as $16 billion a year. This will harm numerous
organizations at a time when many of these groups are now struggling with the
economic downturn.
· Harming The Housing Market: The budget will harm the housing market by limiting the mortgage interest deduction and making it more expensive to purchase or afford a new home. As the National Association of Realtors reports, lowering this deduction will impact all home prices and values for all Americans.
·
Bringing The Death Tax Back: The budget brings back the
estate tax – currently scheduled to be repealed next year – re-imposing a heavy
tax burden on small businesses and family farms.
·
Taxing Charitable
Contributions Will Deter Giving: Included in the tax increase is a cap on itemized deductions for
charitable giving. By putting a new tax on charitable giving, the budget could
cost American charities as much as $16 billion a year.
·
Increasing Taxes On
Charitable Giving Comes At A Time When Millions Of Charities Are Struggling
With The Economic Downturn: Many charities are now
struggling with the economic downturn. Taxing charitable giving will only make
it worse for these organizations and would cause many to shut down. Charities
depend on donations – by lessening the deduction the public is discourage from
giving.
·
The Largest Tax Increase in
American History: The budget will raise
taxes by $1.4 trillion over the next ten years. The cap-and-trade proposal is
expected to raise at least $646 billion alone.
·
A Tax Increase On Families
Of More Than $3,000 A Year In Higher Energy Prices: The cap-and trade proposal in the budget will lead to higher
energy prices and a tax for every American who uses energy. The cap-and-trade
proposal represents a new national climate tax that will cost every household
up to $3,128 annually in higher costs for natural gas, electricity, home
heating oil and gasoline.
·
Tax Burden Would Hit
Lower-Income And Middle-Income Families The Hardest: The cap-and trade tax is highly regressive, impacting most the
lower-income and middle-income families who spend a greater portion of their
monthly income on energy than higher income earners.
·
Potential To Destroy
Anywhere From 1.8 Million To 7 Million Jobs: National Association of
Manufacturers estimated a net job loss of 3 to 4 million; the Heritage
Foundation estimated job losses between 1.8 and 5.3 million; and Charles Rivers
Associates estimated job losses as high as 7 million
·
Stifling Economic Growth: The Environmental Protection Agency estimated a decline in GDP of
$238 billion (0.9%) to $983 billion (3.8%) in 2030 and $1,012 billion (2.4%) to
$2,856 billion (6.9%) in 2050. The Heritage Foundation estimated a decline in
GDP of $1.5 to $4.8 trillion.
·
Higher Energy Costs: The Environmental
Protection Agency estimated a rise in electricity costs of between 44% and 79%.
The National Association of Manufacturers estimated an increase of between 101%
and 129%.