Labor & Economy
Ending Bush Tax Cuts Would Affect Few Small Businesses
Republicans pride themselves of being the champions of small business owners. But it’s helpful to clarify what actually is their definition of a small business.
The Center on Budget and Policy Priorities (CBPP) released a report that shows only 2.5 percent of small business owners would be affected by allowing the Bush tax cuts to expire on the wealthiest taxpayers (top two marginal tax rates).
CBPP writes:
“The claims that allowing the Bush tax cuts for high-income people to expire would seriously harm small businesses rest on an exceedingly broad, and misleading, definition of ‘small business.’ The definition is so broad, in fact, that under it, both President Obama and Governor Romney would count as small business owners—as would 237 of the nation’s 400 wealthiest people.”
Did you catch that? The definition is so broad 237 of the nation’s 400 wealthiest people are considered small business owners.
CBPP explains this often-cited claim that allowing the Bush tax cuts to expire on upper income earners is so exaggerated it includes:
any taxpayer who receives any income from any “pass-through” entity (that is, an entity that does not pay corporate income tax on its profits but instead passes them through to its owners, who pay tax at the individual rates).
It is interesting to note that small business growth during the Clinton rates was twice as high as under the Bush-era tax rates.
Read the entire report here.
(This post first appeared on the AFL-CIO’s Web site.)
-
Pain & ProfitNovember 3, 2025Despite Vow to Protect Health Care for Veterans, VA Losing Doctors and Nurses
-
Column - State of InequalityNovember 6, 2025Congress Could Get Millions of People Off of SNAP by Raising the Minimum Wage, but It Hasn’t — for 16 Years
-
The SlickNovember 5, 2025The David vs. Goliath Story of a Ranching Family and an Oil Giant
-
StrandedNovember 7, 2025U.S. Deports Asylum Seekers to Southern Mexico Without Their Phones
-
The SlickNovember 14, 2025Can an Imperiled Frog Stop Oil Drilling Near Denver Suburbs? Residents Hope So.
-
Latest NewsNovember 11, 2025Photos, Video, Protests — Homeland Security Tightens Rule on Anti-ICE Activities
-
The SlickNovember 12, 2025Known for Its Oil, Texas Became a Renewable Energy Leader. Now It’s Being Unplugged.
-
Column - State of InequalityNovember 13, 2025Barring a Sharp Shift, Health Insurance Costs Will Skyrocket

