I find it extremely droll how leftists with no memory are crowing about their great "victory."
George Bush tax cuts from 2001 and 2003 have now been made permanent for everyone except those making over $400,000. No more sunset, no more temporary extension. They are in place indefinitely.
Fishy, I always love seeing your "this is really a win for the Republicans" schtick. I used to think you were only channeling Cokie Roberts. Now I think you might actually BE Cokie Roberts! I had no idea you were a college hockey fan since you grew up in DC as the daughter of a Congressman and all that.
However, I had speculated that if you took the nominal rate of 250K during the Clinton admin and indexed it for inflation, you'd be somewhere in the 300K range nowadays. Pundits once again read my postings out here and ran with it, and it turns out the # is $397K. So, in real terms, tax rates are back to Clinton era levels. Some victory for Bushonomics....
Beyond you though, this agreement did finally clean up some annoying BS, like the constant AMT patch and the doc fix. I'm no fan of Itch McConnell, but he does deserve credit for agreeing to all that. That's why the package came in at 630Bn instead of 1T or so.
Lastly, my way out of this deficit would be to put ALL tax rates back at Clinton era levels, subject to a couple of tweaks like the AMT for example. However, even I wouldn't go so far as to have them all take effect immediately. Anything to be done has to be done on a phased in approach. Whether by design or by accident we might actually be on our way to doing that. Cutting or raising $1T dollars in one year is absurd. Its not possible to do in an era of recovering growth. Do that and you get the UK, which will be in austerity and flat growth for a decade when its all projected to be over in 2018 by their govt's own projections. IMHO the budget can sustain a little over half of the yearly deficit, so about 500-600Bn, in tax hikes/spending cuts. After that the remaining gap has to be closed by a growing economy. We'd all like 5% GDP growth and 300K jobs per month, but 2.3% GDP growth and 175K jobs a month will get us there eventually too. The balancing act is deficit reduction vs growth, and we have to defer to growth in that trade off.