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Taxes Archive

Monday

21

June 2010

0

COMMENTS

Russia Eliminating Capital Gains Tax

Written by , Posted in Taxes

Formerly communist Russia is beating supposedly capitalist America at our own game.  In order to attract new investments, Russia will eliminate their capital gains tax in 2011.

Russia will scrap capital gains tax on long-term direct investment from 2011, President Dmitry Medvedev has said.

Mr Medvedev said that in terms of improving Russia’s investment climate “we, I hope, are moving forward”.

…Its oil revenues fund, which has been financing the deficit, is expected to end next year, and the government wants to attract more foreign investment to boost the economy.

In recognizing that the correct capital gains rate is zero, Russian politicians seem to understand tax policy better than our own. Meanwhile, the U.S. capital gains rate will increase from 15 to 20 percent in 2011 if Congress does not extend the cuts enacted under Bush.  The recently passed government run healthcare bill also included a 3.8% rate increase that will take effect in 2013.

Maybe the Russians will just be capturing the investments that Americans don’t want.

Thursday

22

April 2010

0

COMMENTS

Unions March In Illinois, Demand More Taxpayer Money

Written by , Posted in Economics & the Economy, Labor Unions, Taxes

While Illinois, like so many state governments, is already struggling to pay for overly generous public pension plans, 15,000 union members marched on the state capital demanding yet more money in the form of higher taxes.

According to ALEC’s Rich States, Poor States, Illinois is ranked 47 out of 50 for its economic outlook.  It also already has the 10th highest worker compensation costs among the states.  Raising taxes to pay public workers yet more would be a disastrous move for the state, and likely foster continued migration of the wealthy out of the state in search of lower tax jurisdictions.

Thursday

15

April 2010

0

COMMENTS

Tuesday

6

April 2010

0

COMMENTS

Volcker Says Taxes Will Have To Rise To Fight Deficit

Written by , Posted in Taxes

Volcker suggests a European-style VAT (and why not, since we’ve already got a European-style, unsustainable welfare state):

The United States should consider raising taxes to help bring deficits under control and may need to consider a European-style value-added tax, White House adviser Paul Volcker said on Tuesday.

Volcker, answering a question from the audience at a New York Historical Society event, said the value-added tax “was not as toxic an idea” as it has been in the past and also said a carbon or other energy-related tax may become necessary.

Though he acknowledged that both were still unpopular ideas, he said getting entitlement costs and the U.S. budget deficit under control may require such moves. “If at the end of the day we need to raise taxes, we should raise taxes,” he said.

Something you will never hear anyone in the Obama regime say: “If at the end of the day we need to cut spending, we should cut spending.”

I preempted Volcker and explained why a VAT won’t eliminate budget deficits over 3 months ago.  Dan Mitchell has also been beating this horse for a while now.

Monday

22

February 2010

0

COMMENTS

Memo To Obama: Economists Do Not Agree

Written by , Posted in Economics & the Economy, Taxes

President Obama likes to assert that economists across the political spectrum agree that big government spending is necessary to fight off recession.  “Economists on the left and right,” he insisted early in 2009, “agree that the last thing the government should do during a recession is cut back on spending.”  Essentially, he’s saying that all economists are Keynesians.  This is simply false, as Harvard Professor Jeffrey Miron tells us today at the Daily Caller.

..That brings us to the second argument for higher spending: the Keynesian claim that spending stimulates the economy. If this is accurate, it might seem the U.S. should continue its high-spending ways until the recession is over.

But the Keynesian argument for spending is also problematic. To begin with, the Keynesian view implies that any spending—whether for vital infrastructure or bridges to nowhere—is equally good at stimulating the economy. This might be true in the short term (emphasis on might), but it cannot be true over the long haul, and many “temporary” programs last for decades. So stimulus spending should be for good projects, not “digging ditches,” yet the number of good projects is small given how much is already being spent.

More broadly, the Keynesian model of the economy relies on strong assumptions, so we should not embrace it without empirical confirmation. In fact, economists find weak or contradictory evidence that higher government spending spurs the economy.

Substantial research, however, does find that tax cuts stimulate the economy and that fiscal adjustments—attempts to reduce deficits by raising taxes or lowering expenditure—work better when they focus on tax cuts. This does not fit the Keynesian view, but it makes perfect sense given that high taxes and ill-justified spending make the economy less productive…

Recently, Obama again cited the entire spectrum of economists as supporters of his agenda: “Now, if you hear some of the critics, they’ll say, well, the Recovery Act, I don’t know if that’s really worked, because we still have high unemployment. But what they fail to understand is that every economist, from the left and the right, has said, because of the Recovery Act, what we’ve started to see is at least a couple of  million jobs that have either been created or would have been lost.

Economist Robert Barro explains in the Wall Street Journal what a load that is.

Wednesday

10

February 2010

0

COMMENTS

Nanny Taxes Are Not A Solution

Written by , Posted in Taxes, The Nanny State & A Regulated Society

The Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids is throwing out press releases left and right (like this one for North Dakota) highlighting all the money state government’s could soak up if they slapped a $1 tax on cigarettes.  If states did this, they inform us that all kind of wondrous benefits would follow, such as fewer kids taking up smoking and more adult smokers dropping the habit.  Oh, and we’d save millions in health care costs!  Reuters took up the call and trumpeted that the tax “could reap billions” for states.

So what is the problem?  It’s two-fold, as I see it.  One, raising revenues is not going to make a difference in budget outlooks if lawmakers do not also adopt a fundamentally different approach to governing.  Business as usual would just mean spending any additional funds to buy new votes.  There is simply no reason to believe the money would be spent only for the purposes for which government was actually instituted.  In fact, government has enough money for those purposes already.

Second, nanny taxes like these (which are just excise taxes targeting particularly unpopular or risky activities) limit individual freedom and start us down a slippery slope of deciding what activities people are allowed to partake in.  Some people do things, like smoke, which involve some harm to themselves.  But it also clearly provides a benefit, or they wouldn’t do it, and the only person capable of weighing the cost and the benefits of an individual activity is the actual individual.  After all, the pleasure we take from any particular activity is subjective to ourselves and cannot be universally measured.  I take no pleasure in smoking, but others do.  That is their right, and they should not be targeted for punishment under the guise of balancing budgets.

If it’s smokers today, who might it be tomorrow?  Motorcycle riders? Hunters? Fast food eaters?  …Blog readers?

Thursday

7

January 2010

0

COMMENTS

France Reaches For Google’s Pockets

Written by , Posted in Taxes

Another successful business targeted for taxation.  It’s like the statists don’t want people to be successful:

The proposal, outlined in a government-commissioned survey, has set the scene for a new Gallic run-in with Google – fast becoming the global internet behemoth the world loves to hate.

The levy on advertising revenue is the latest plank in France’s drive to regulate the internet, which has seen it enact some of the world’s toughest antipiracy legislation.

…Guillaume Cerutti, one of the authors of the report said the tax would put an end to “enrichment without any limit or compensation”.

Huh?  Google provides a service.  The only people looking for enrichment without limit or compensation are the big government statists like Guillaume Cerutti, who want to take from the productive sector without providing any value of their own.

Not that I feel much sympathy for Google, which is notorious for supporting France-style big government right here in the U.S.  But I’m also confident that, as the successful search giant is increasingly turned upon by its supposed leftwing allies (because they really do hate any business that is successful), it will realize the error of its ways.

Monday

14

December 2009

0

COMMENTS

A Value-Added Tax Won’t Solve the Deficit Crisis

Written by , Posted in Big Government, Taxes, Waste & Government Reform

As Congress prepares to raise the debt ceiling by $1.8 trillion, there are renewed calls from political elites for a value-added tax in America. The New York Times all but campaigned for the idea while touting it as a possible “cure for deficits.” But a VAT would do nothing to solve our deficit problem. Rather, it would supply new fuel to big government bureaucrats addicted to spending.

Supporters of a VAT mistakenly assume that increasing government revenues will lead to reduced budget deficits. While raising additional revenue may be part of any long term budgetary solution, it is not sufficient by itself – and probably not needed at all. Unless systemic changes are made, there is every reason to believe that additional revenues will simply be used to provide additional entitlements, pork barrel projects, and other wasteful government spending initiatives designed solely to enhance the reelection prospects of politicians. So long as deficit spending provides tangible benefits to the political class, they will continue to run deficits regardless of the amount of revenue raised.

Even in the midst of recession, federal revenues exceeded $2 trillion in fiscal year 2009. Can anyone really argue that $2 trillion is not enough for the federal government to perform the duties outlined in the Constitution?

Much of the spending is on programs that clearly fall outside of constitutional duties, so returning to those principles and limiting the reach of the federal government is an obvious solution. It’s also not likely to happen in the immediate future. While continuing to work toward this goal, there are other solutions we can pursue to bring more immediate payoffs.

Every state in the union except Vermont is legally required, either through their constitution or statutes, to balance the budget. Federal balanced budget amendments were very narrowly defeated in both the 80’s and 90’s. The Tea Party movement might just provide the additional electoral support to make another attempt worthwhile.

If we are successful in forcing Congress to take seriously the need for spending cuts, either by encouraging systemic changes in the budget process or just utilizing electoral pressure in general, then finding places to trim spending should not be difficult. Potential savings abound.

The federal government currently subsidizes the states to an annual tune of $500 billion. These federal grants have exploded in number over the last half century – doubling over just the last two decades from about 400 to over 800 programs – and include money earmarked for everything from education to community development. Medicaid accounts for almost half of the $500 billion. Grants to the states are rarely looked at as a place to find savings, but should be considered prime candidates.

Federal grants have a destructive effect on federalism and encourage waste in state budgets. Medicaid’s dollar matching system, for instance, encourages overspending. And funneling money through Washington D.C. not only adds an unnecessary and costly layer of bureaucracy, but also helps shield the politicians spending the money from those paying the taxes. This makes government less accountable to the people. As grant money often comes with strings, it also erodes state autonomy. Scaling back or even eliminating these programs would not only be a solid first step in restoring fiscal sanity, but is simply good policy.

There are too many productive avenues through which to pursue spending cuts to list them all here. Rather than taxing value – which of course means discouraging its creation – lawmakers need to find where they can trim the fat. The idea that a VAT will lead to reduced budget deficits is a pipe dream. If lawmakers want to raise taxes, they need to first convince us that it is truly necessary – and that means getting serious about reducing the bloat of government.

Cross-posted at Big Government.

Tuesday

8

December 2009

0

COMMENTS

Nancy Pelosi Wants Global Financial Tax

Written by , Posted in Economics & the Economy, Taxes

We need to “pitch in” more:

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) endorsed the idea of a “global” tax on stock trades and other financial transactions, saying the estimated $150 billion in annual revenue from such a tax could be used to help fund more stimulus spending.

At her weekly press briefing on Thursday, Pelosi said the financial transactions tax (HR4191) currently before Congress would have to be made “global” to keep U.S. investors from taking their business overseas and out of taxable reach.

…Pelosi said she thought the idea might have currency among a public eager to see Wall Street firms “pitching in” to help the government grow the economy.

“I think there would be a market for it among the American people to say that we are all participating in the economic prosperity of our country, and we are all pitching in to continue that prosperity,” said Pelosi.

Nancy Pelosi’s view of society and the economy is gloriously and unabashedly foolish.

Let me get this straight: we need to tax productive financial transactions and give that money to a cadre of bureaucrats and politicos, who will then waste it various and sundry ways, in order to be prosperous.  No.

Taxes are not how we contribute to prosperity.  We contribute to prosperity by producing, and taxes are a burden on production.  Nancy Pelosi has it exactly backwards.

Monday

30

November 2009

0

COMMENTS

Don’t Feed The Government Beast

Written by , Posted in Taxes

No matter how much it begs:

Would you gladly pay more for a cheeseburger today if it keeps your local librarian working tomorrow?

Several members of the Fairfax County Board of Supervisors think so. So do supervisors in neighboring Loudoun County, who hope the General Assembly will allow them to impose a meals tax, too.

Despite the recession, a growing number of Northern Virginia officials say they think people would be willing to pay more when dining out to avoid further cuts in budgets for schools and local government.

Statists always play this trick. Anytime there is a potential need to cut the budget, or even just to not increase it, they always pick the most popular items and threaten to cut those. Yet there’s little reason to believe that these are actually the programs or services most threatened. Don’t believe the spin; you don’t need to pay yet more in taxes to keep having a library.  That’s just bunk.