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Romney video helps solidify 2012 race as the % election

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WASHINGTON -- The Internet revived the @ symbol. Cellphones personified the : ) and ; punctuation marks. Twitter has pounded new life into the # sign.

And now the 2012 election is making the % sign a star.

The leaked video of Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney was the latest event to send people scrambling for the top row of their keyboards as he criticized the 47% of Americans who don’t pay income taxes.

The attention paid to his comments this week helped solidify the 2012 race as the % election.

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It’s no surprise that a contest shaped by the financial crisis, the Great Recession and acute economic fears is dominated by numbers. And many of the most important numbers come with a % sign attached.

Here they are, from the bottom up:

0-.25% -- The short-term interest rate set by the Federal Reserve, in place since late 2008 and set to remain there through mid-2015 to try to entice people and businesses to spend money instead of save it.

1% -- The top 1% of American households, by wealth. The Occupy Wall Street movement accused them of greed and corruption in causing America’s economic problems.

3.49% -- The average interest rate for a 30-year fixed-rate mortgage in July, a record low, according to Freddie Mac, which has lured more people to refinance or buy a home.

8% -- The level at which the unemployment rate has been above for 43 straight months, through August, the longest stretch since the Labor Department started tracking the figure in 1948.

47% -- The percentage of people who don’t pay income taxes (actually 46.4% in 2011, according to the Tax Policy Center). Romney derided them as dependent on government.

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39.6% -- The tax rate President Obama wants for income over $250,000, up from the top-level 35% rate set by the Bush-era tax cuts.

99% -- The percentage of Americans who are not among the wealthiest. Occupy Wall Street has used the figure as code for average Americans.

ALSO:

Romney falling behind even before 47% video surfaced

Occupy anniversary: Marches, arrests but, ultimately, less energy

On leaked video, Romney says his win would boost markets, economy

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