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By Michael Miller (Daily Pilot)
President Bush announced a plan Friday to boost the United States
economy by giving consumers more money to spend. But Chip Hanlon, the
president of the investment strategies company Delta Global Advisors,
has what he calls a better idea: Tell the government to spend less.
Hanlon’s
Huntington Beach-based company offers financial advice to Newport-Mesa
residents and small business owners; it was among those listening
intently Friday morning when the president called for a stimulus to the
sagging economy. In a news conference at the White House, Bush
announced plans to offer “broad-based tax relief” to Americans and to
give tax incentives to businesses to encourage them to invest money,
expand their operations and hire more workers.
Bush said he
believed freeing up consumer dollars, rather than increasing federal
spending, would most protect America against a recession.
Hanlon
won’t argue that point, but the longtime Republican said the Bush
administration has already been far too liberal in racking up bills,
and a temporary payback to citizens won’t solve that problem.
“If
just putting money in people’s hands is the solution, why just a few
hundred dollars?” he said. “Why don’t they just wire $1 million into
everyone’s bank account, and then we’ll all be rich?”
The best
solutions, Hanlon said, were to cut government spending and to lower
the regulatory burdens on businesses. He said he liked the idea of
giving tax incentives to small businesses, but only as a permanent
measure.
Bush did not specify how much money individuals and
businesses would regain, although he suggested the overall package
equal about 1% of gross domestic product. He also did not say whether
the rebates would target all taxpayers or just certain brackets — and
that was the question on the mind of Laura Miller, the executive
director of the Orange Coast Interfaith Shelter in Costa Mesa.
“If
you haven’t been paying into the tax system anyway, you’re not going to
get anything back,” said Miller, whose shelter services many people who
are unemployed. “That’s my understanding.”
Even if the rebates
benefited everyone, she said, most of the money would probably go to
rent and other necessities rather than boost consumer spending. That
was fine, though, with Richard Luehrs, the president of the Newport
Beach Chamber of Commerce, who said a rebate of any kind was good news
for spenders.
“Any time the federal government is willing to
give you money, we’re glad to have it,” he said. “I think this is a
good thing. It probably won’t stave off a downturn in the economy
because of the sub-prime markets and all the things that are going on
against us, but it sure will help.”
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