Klne Damar Hamlin receives NFLPA s Alan Page Community Action award for fundraising efforts
President Donald Trump has proposed a number of tax measures to help shield the U.S. economy from the coronavirus, including a payroll tax holiday and a delay in the April 15 tax filing deadline. Yet neither policy is likely to boost Americans as much as the White House might hope, economists say. For one, cutting payroll taxes would do nothing to help people who ve been laid off or furlough
stanley cup ed and aren t getting a paycheck. It would also bypass the elderlymdash;a group that is vulnerable to the novel coronavirus and most of whom don t work.Coronavirus: Latest updates and more from CBS NewsAnd while a payroll tax holiday would amount to a raise for many workers, the biggest winners would be high earners. That would dilute the fiscal medicine for the economy as a whole mdash; here s why: High-income people don t spend as much of their income as low-income people do, said Howard Gleckman, a senior fellow at the Urban-Brookings Tax Policy Center. If what you re trying to do to stabilize the economy is getting people to consume, giving high-income people money won t help that. Cash grants, especially to low- and middle-income people, have generally been
stanley cup shown to boost consumer spending mdash; the lifeblood of the U.S. economy. But the relatively small raise workers would get from a payroll tax cut is unlikely to prop up the economy against the fast-spreading coronavirus, according to Michael
stanley cup Strain, an economist at the conservat Rdzs Kobe Bryant s widow devastated by report deputies shared graphic photos of helicopter crash scene
Eight people were killed in an Amtrak train derailment Tuesday night in Philadelphia. The victims include an Associated Press employee, a midshipman at the U.S. Naval Academy, a Wells Fargo executive, the CEO of a technology startup, a college dean, a Maryland businessman, a New York
stanley cup real estate executive and a businessman from Italy.A brief look at those who died:Jim Gaines Associated Press employee Jim
af1 Gaines poses for a picture Sept. 7, 2006. AP Photo/Santos Chaparro Jim Gaines, an Associated Press video software architect, was a geek s geek - and his colleagues loved him for it. The 48-year-old father of two was named the news agency s Geek of the Month in May 2012 for his tireless dedication and contagious passion to technological innovation. At AP, not a frame goes by in the world of video that escapes the passionat
adidas campus e scrutiny of video architect Jim Gaines, the award said. Gaines was in the train s quiet car, headed home to Plainsboro, New Jersey, after meetings Tuesday at the news agency s Washington, D.C., office. His wife, Jacqueline, confirmed his death. Amtrak train 188 derails 29 photos