The big problem is that both parties are inept, and we don't have a viable third option, because the American people are to obsessed with the two-party system and friggin' tactical voting.
Exactly. As horrible as the Democrats have been, the Republicans really have nothing inspiring to offer. They're basically still the same party they were when Bush was in charge, except smaller and more defiant. In this case that's not a bad thing because it's putting a door-stop in these insane Democratic policies, but it doesn't mean they're going to do any better if they're the majority. Saying "no that's a bad idea don't do it" isn't the same as saying "I've got a better idea", and they just don't have any.
We need to raise revenue. How exactly to go about that, I don't know. Full Employment for a start. Keynesian Economics maybe?
Keynesian economics doesn't work. The theory is that for every dollar of money the government spends, that dollar will generate some multiplier of wealth. However, it completely ignores two things: A) That taxes will deduct a percentage from that multiplier, and B) The government will go into debt, which must be repaid at some point.
Governments cannot create wealth, since they do not offer a "service" so to speak but rather serve a function. That being said, economic theory states that lowering taxes will also cause a mulitplier of wealth, since there is more money circulating the economy. What lowering taxes also does, however, is create a better business environment (the US currently has one of the higher corporate tax rates in the world), which can attract more wealth to the country.
Ronald Reagen used tax cuts to turn around the economy in the 80s, he still ran up a large deficit because they were accompanied by defense increases to run the Soviet Union into a corner, but the government took in a highly increased level of revenue and the economy began a boom that lasted until the 90s.
That's a great way to sum it up. Democrats like to say that Reagan's policies created a large deficit that had to be fixed by Bill Clinton's wonderful liberal economic moves, thus proving that conservative economic policies don't work and that the Democracts were right all along. This could not be farther from the truth.
As you said, Reagan took the mess that Jimmy Carter left HIM and turned it around. The deficit happened because we had to outproduce Russia to win the Cold War, and we did. The cost of that was a large national debt, but the debt wasn't nearly as out of control as it is now simply because we were still maintaining a stable economy, which was why it was even POSSIBLE for Clinton to balance the budget by the end of his time in office. Clinton did a good job of that. Unfortunately, he also championed the Community Reinvestment Act, which was directly responsible for paving the way to the housing market crisis that caused the CURRENT financial nightmare.
The point of that is, tax cuts do benefit the economy as a whole, even if they mean reduced government revenue short-term. Typically within 6 months to a year, tax cuts rebound in the form of increased government income, as Reagan proved. He used that income to bury the USSR
war machine, but the principle is still sound and so is conservative economics.
People also love to argue that Bush's Jr.'s "conservative policies" helped create this mess, further 'proving' that Republican budgeting doesn't work. But people who say that think Bush's economic policies were conservative. They
weren't. In fact his economic policies-- short of the tax cuts at the beginning of his first term-- absolutely sucked. Unlike Reagan, Bush didn't cut government spending ANYWHERE. So he cut taxes but he didn't reduce spending. That's like pouring less water in a leaky bucket hoping it will stop leaking. In fact, spending skyrocketed because of the Afghan and Iraq wars, so in addition to pouring less water, he also punched some more holes in the bottom. Defense agencies start sprouting up like mushrooms and absorbing money as though it was infinite. That's not conservative economics, that's irresponsibility.
So the economy crashed right as the national debt was ballooning and Bush had no idea what to do.
And then spend-happy Obama comes in declaring he will save us by...spending more money? Uh, ok. Oh look, now we've had our credit rating dropped because
everyone knows we can't possibly pay our bills. Good job, President.
As I said before, there's very, very little that can be done to fix this other than slowly cut spending over an extended period of time while simultaneously cutting taxes and plugging regulation loopholes. That, and drilling every single source of oil on American ground to reduce our spending on foreign fuel. That'd help.
Either that or invent fusion-powered cars.