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The Bush Tax Cuts for Businesses . The second change to the tax code was enacted in 2003. Called the Jobs and Growth Tax Relief Reconciliation Act (JGTRRA), it was introduced to provide a series ...
President George W. Bush gestures as he addresses the National Newspaper Association meeting in Washington on March 22, 2001. Bush's tax cuts are set to expire at the end of next year, putting the ...
Prior to the Bush tax cuts, the tax rate on capital gains was 20 percent. Dividends were taxed at the same rate as wage and salary income; therefore, most were taxed at 39.6 percent.
The Senate on Monday voted along party lines that making the expiring 2017 tax cuts permanent as part of President Trump’s ...
What it would mean to your taxes if the Bush tax cuts expire Dec. 13, 2012 -- Editor's Note: This is the latest in an ongoing series about the building blocks that lawmakers could put on the table ...
The 10-year-old Bush tax cuts are clearly an economic failure that has made our country fiscally weaker, write Michael Linden and Michael Ettlinger. President George W. Bush is welcomed to Omaha ...
President George W. Bush signed his first major round of tax cuts in 2001, reveling in a surplus and describing the reductions as giving extra federal funds back to taxpayers. Ten years later, the ...
The “Bush tax cuts” are the product of two staggered tax reforms: the Economic Growth and Tax Relief Reconciliation Act of 2001 and the Jobs and Growth Tax Relief Reconciliation Act of 2003. The 2001 ...
The tax cuts enacted in 2001 and 2003, known as the Bush tax cuts, are set to expire Dec. 31, and the fight over what to do is increasingly heated.
The Bush administration yesterday released a highly selective analysis of the cost to families of rolling back scheduled tax cuts, an early sign of the White House's plan to brand Democrats as tax ...
There's a lesson for President-elect George W. Bush in the experience of the two ... The first, upon arrival in Washington, was urged to give up his plan for a big tax cut. It would spur ...
Some things never change. The current Republican leadership, like the Republican leadership of the early aughts, likes tax cuts—the broader the better. The current Democratic leadership ...