![]() |
Citizens for Tax Justice 1311 L Street, NW Washington, DC |
Thursday, February 15, 2001 Contact: Bob McIntyre, 202/626-3780 Wendy Ray, 202/624-1727 |
Click here to see the full analysis in PDF format.
Click here to see this release in PDF format.
President George W. Bush's proposed tax breaks for the best-off one percent of Americans
would cost more than the total amount of money needed to pay for a comprehensive Medicare
prescription drug benefit for all seniors, according to a study released today by Citizens for Tax
Justice and USAction.
"Our choices are stark. Do we want to give 39 million senior citizens the respect they
deserve with prescription drug coverage under Medicare? Or do we give $774 billion in tax
giveaways to a million millionaires?" asked William McNary, President of USAction. The report, Bad Policy, Bad Medicine, reveals that over a ten-year period the wealthiest one
percent of Americans would receive $774 billion in tax breaks--while a fully funded
comprehensive Medicare prescription drug benefit for America's seniors would cost a net of
$738 billion. "Last year, Dick Cheney famously claimed that he had to vote against Head Start in the
early 1980s because he had voted for the 1981 Reagan corporate and upper-income tax cuts
instead," noted Robert S. McIntyre, director of Citizens for Tax Justice. "Well, we're seeing the
same thing again this year. President Bush says we can't afford anything but a miserly
prescription drug plan because he wants to use all available resources for tax breaks for the
rich." "A narrow slice of the population--the wealthiest one percent, whose incomes average
over one million dollars--would receive 43 percent of the total Bush tax cuts," McIntyre
pointed out. Seniors have been the victims of skyrocketing drug costs and have greater out-of-pocket
prescription costs as a percentage of their incomes than any other group. "My wife and I pay $18,400 annually for prescription medication and supplemental
premiums," said Bill McHugh, a retiree from Narberth, PA. "This is an enormous hardship. I'm
a Republican," noted McHugh, "and though I would realize some savings from this tax cut, I
think the President has wrongly prioritized his agenda. He should pass a comprehensive
Medicare prescription benefit, rather than giving a huge tax windfall to millionaires." "President Bush has made his choice clear. He favors a huge tax cut for the wealthy and an
inadequate prescription drug plan that will only help one percent of seniors, "said John Marvin,
Regional Director of the Association of Retired Americans and board member of USAction.
"Today we are calling on Congress to put first things first. Take care of filling the prescriptions
for our seniors instead of filling the bank accounts of one million millionaires."
Back To Reports