Not to mention:
Since mid-2007 the U.S. population has grown by 17.2 million, according to the Census Bureau, but we have 374,000 fewer jobs since a November 2007 peak and are 10 million jobs shy of where we should be.
http://online.wsj.com/articles/mort...-time-scandal-of-part-time-america-1405291652
But we know the main factors that drove that income growth, and so we know why that income growth has stalled. (I'm just going along with that last assertion, since I have not looked at US mean real income per capita in a while).
Subtract out the part time job gains and it gets far worse.
Report on CNBC this AM revealed part-time jobs increased by 800K-ish while full-time jobs decreased by 550K -ish.
Lemme see.... 'ODUMBOCARE??"
Here I shall quote Quiggin<sup>*</sup>:Laffer made a simple but brilliant observation. There is a level of taxation that maximizes tax revenues. Too high and you choke off growth. Too low and you don't gt enough money.
Progressives hate this concept because their aim is not economic efficiency but power and control.

Here I shall quote Quiggin<sup>*</sup>:
Wanniski christened this graph the "Laffer curve", but as Laffer himself was happy to concede, there was nothing original about it. It can be traced back to the fourteenth century Arabic writer Ibn Khaldun. Laffer credited his own version to...John Maynard Keynes. And while few economists had made much of the point, that was mainly because it seemed too obvious to bother speling out.
What was novel in Laffer's presentation [ to Wanniski, Cheney, and Rumsfeld] was what might be called the "Laffer hypothesis", namely that the United States in the early 1980s was on the descending part of the curve, where higher tax rates produced less revenue.
Unfortunately, as the old saying has it, Laffer's analysis contained a mixture of correctness and originality. The Laffer curve was correct but unoriginal. The Laffer hypothesis was original but incorrect.
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<sup>*</sup>John Quiggin, "Zombie Economics," Pg. 142, Princeton University Press, 2010.
Here I shall quote Quiggin<sup>*</sup>:
Wanniski christened this graph the "Laffer curve", but as Laffer himself was happy to concede, there was nothing original about it. It can be traced back to the fourteenth century Arabic writer Ibn Khaldun. Laffer credited his own version to...John Maynard Keynes. And while few economists had made much of the point, that was mainly because it seemed too obvious to bother speling out.
What was novel in Laffer's presentation [ to Wanniski, Cheney, and Rumsfeld] was what might be called the "Laffer hypothesis", namely that the United States in the early 1980s was on the descending part of the curve, where higher tax rates produced less revenue.
Unfortunately, as the old saying has it, Laffer's analysis contained a mixture of correctness and originality. The Laffer curve was correct but unoriginal. The Laffer hypothesis was original but incorrect.
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<sup>*</sup>John Quiggin, "Zombie Economics," Pg. 142, Princeton University Press, 2010.