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tn13 | 9 years ago
Isn't that proven to be a mostly false notion? Lower taxes tend to bring in more revenue and create more employment.
tn13 | 9 years ago
Isn't that proven to be a mostly false notion? Lower taxes tend to bring in more revenue and create more employment.
ergothus|9 years ago
Two responses:
1) A bit of an irrelevant point, since we're not talking about RAISING taxes, we're talking about collecting taxes that are due under current rules. (You can argue that's an effective tax increase, but I doubt people/companies that aren't following the rules are a good basis for policy - with lower taxes they'll still cheat)
2) But if we do consider your point...I don't know that your point has been shown at all. Sure, if you're on the far side of the Laffer curve, which is 50-70% tax rate (depending on whose numbers you trust), but we're at 20-38% tax rate in the US (and that's marginal rate, not overall rate). I'd also look to the efforts of politicians like Brownback in Kansas, where a massive tax cut led to...a tanking of the local economy. I don't recall of hearing of a single supply-side success in post-WWII America, but I'll admit to non-perfect knowledge.
Also, as a liberal, I support taxes because I support many govt programs. Taxes themselves are NOT exciting - if we could really raise more govt revenue by cutting taxes, I'd be all for it, but I've not seen any reliable evidence for that (again, unless you're on the other side of the Laffer curve) and I've seen at least limited evidence against it.
ryanwaggoner|9 years ago
Whether that's too high or too low is a separate discussion. But saying we're at 38% just isn't true.
linkregister|9 years ago
The primary impact has been massive reduction in the ability of the state government to provide services, including education. That is too long-term to be immediately measurable.
unknown|9 years ago
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Symmetry|9 years ago
kcorbitt|9 years ago
This is a very practical difference. For the sake of easy math, let's assume that the maximum-revenue point on the curve is a 50% tax rate. It then follows that for every % you charge someone over 50%, tax revenue decreases. Which means that at this rate, every additional X% of tax is actually decreasing total economic output by 2X%! And assuming that we're on a smooth curve, that means that every X% you DECREASE your tax from the Laffer point is creating 2X% of economic value. Now, based on how fairly the created value is distributed and how efficiently you believe the government can spend its tax revenue you may have a different opinion on how much value you're comfortable destroying to increase tax revenue, but I'd submit that 2X is quite a high number.
I believe we need much-higher-than-0 taxes, but "we're still below the Laffer point" is a poor argument for raising them.
kvb|9 years ago
ashark|9 years ago
Got some examples where this actually worked?
vacri|9 years ago