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President George Bush aimed to start 2008 with a shot in the arm when he proposed a $150 million economic growth package on January 18. The package is a one-year disbursal of personal tax rebates and business tax incentives. Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson believes the package "will counter the effects of higher gas prices, the capital market downturn," subprime mortgage lending terms, tanking housing prices and nationwide home foreclosures. Key to the package's impact is immediate release of money. This requires the US Senate to pass legislation within the first two months of first quarter 2008 and then, the IRS begin processing rebate checks "sixty days after the legislation is enacted." Bear in mind this would during the income tax filing period. Middle-income individuals and families may look forward to $800 and $1,600, respectively when all steps are completed.
House Majority Leader Nancy Pelosi (CA 8th District) and House Minority Leader John Boehner (OH, 8th District) made separate triumphant statements about the January 24 bipartisan House approval. Pelosi described it as "an agreement to immediately jumpstart the slowing economy. Over 100 million households will soon receive 'recovery' rebates." Boehner concurs stating, "The economic growth package will put money in the hands of middle-income families and give small businesses incentives to create new jobs."
President Bush used the 2008 Congress of Tomorrow Luncheon, held January 25 in West Virginia, as an opportunity to press the Senate "to move quickly on the economic growth package." The Senate shares the concerns of average Americans and, therefore, wants add-ons for unemployment benefit extensions and increases in food stamps to the legislation. Senate Democrats recognize roughly 65 million working Americans would get partial to zero rebates under the House's scheme.
One college administrator who requests anonymity asked, "Are you talking about the money that they [IRS] were supposed to be giving back as a rebate but found a way to keep it?" She's concerned about a reprisal of the 2001 tax rebate results. NYC Councilwoman Letitia James (35th District) said simply, "It's too little, too late."
Americans riddle the "Ask the Whitehouse" page on the Whitehouse Web site with questions about the package's soundness. Here in New York, Brooklyn resident Audrey Taitt-Hall remarks, "I have reservations about the package. What will we have to give up to get this money? Presently, childcare centers and senior citizen centers are either closed or significantly cutback. There are many cuts in education programs like music and sports. Is this the price to get these rebates?"
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Stimulus package including tax rebate checks is too little, too late
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