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Democratic National Campaign Committee The truth about taxes

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Gilder Lehrman Collection #: GLC09532.09 Author/Creator: Democratic National Campaign Committee Place Written: s.l. Type: Broadside Date: 1936 Pagination: 1 p. : 33 x 19 cm. Order a Copy

[Draft Created by Crowdsourcing]
The Truth About Taxes

Who Put Us in the Red?- REPUBLICANS!

Although Republicans were first to have an unbalanced budget, President Hoover did nothing to stop the collapse of national and personal fortune.
The depression caused losses of some 25 billion between 1929 and 1933.
It cost farmers 6 1/2 billion in 3 years.
It cost over 7 billion in savings, more billions in the loss of homes, and many more billions in the loss of earnings.

Private losses and a 6 1/2 billion public deficit in 3 long years of Hoover far outdistanced our 13 billion deficit under Roosevelt Recovery

Who Pulled Us Out?- DEMOCRATS!

National income will be 21 billion greater in 1936 than in 1932 (estimate)
Farm cash income is up 60 per cent.
National savings at 53 1/2 billion have recovered more than half their depression loss; securities on the New York Stock Exchange have increased nearly 32 billion in value since 1933; weekly payrolls for March, 1936, were about 21 million more than a year ago; the index of production has climbed up 72 per cent (July, 1932-April, 1936)

Our gross national debt of 33.8 billion in less than 12 per cent of our national resources today

We cannot escape the cost of bringing recovery out of chaos, but-

1. Taxes to pay off debts will be collected out of these RESTORED VALUES.
2. A LESS PROPORTION of income goes into taxes. The General Motors report shows 55 per cent of income paid for federal taxes in 1932 as against 15 per cent in 1935.
3. Taxes give you MORE FOR YOUR MONEY than ever before- a vast chain of national improvements, conservation of our long-wasted natural wealth, safety in investments, lower mortgage rates, cheaper electricity, security in livelihood.

COMPARE THE PAST

In 1919 our gross national debt was 26 1/2 billion. In 11 years it was reduced by 10 1/2 billion. With national income soaring to 80 billion and business flourishing, it might have been wholly wiped out had not Republicans lowered income taxes in the higher brackets three times and returned excess was profits to profiteers.

COMPARE OTHER NATIONS

Our gross per capita debt is $264; England's $847; France's $835. An English citizen (married, 2 children) begins paying taxes on as small an income as $1,500; he pays 10 times more than American on $5,000. Although most Americans also pay state income taxes, sometimes equal to federal levies, English and French tax burdens are still far heavier.

THE TAX BUGABOO
Internal Revenue comes mainly from two sources- from taxes which affect things we buy, largely luxuries, and from taxes on incomes and inheritances. You pay heavier taxes because you buy and earn more.
I. To existing taxes from the first source, the New Deal has added little, principally: (1) AAA raised farm prices 62 per cent and (2) payroll taxes starting in 1936, to meet the cost of Social Security. We have always footed the bill for old age, unemployment and neglected childhood. Now, as do other civilized nations, we will pay in an orderly way for 100 per cent more humane care.
II. To income and inheritance taxes the New Deal has added little for the average taxpayer. It has strictly applied the rule of ability to pay. In 1935, it boosted rates of surtax on incomes over $50,000. In 1036, it revised the regular corporation income taxes, lowering the rates on incomes under $40,000 and placed a new graduated surtax on undistributed corporation earnings so as to reach capitalists who formerly left business profits piled up in corporation treasuries rather than pay rightful individual surtaxes on dividends.

Had it not been for passing the bonus and outlawing the processing taxes for farm relief, no rise in taxes in 1936 would have been needed

REPLACE FEARS WITH FACTS

REELECT ROOSEVELT AND RECOVERY

DEMOCRATIC NATIONAL CAMPAIGN COMMITTEE

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