Showing posts with label progressive tax. Show all posts
Showing posts with label progressive tax. Show all posts

Sunday, May 5, 2024

Working class tax rates now higher than billionaires'

 From The Hartmann Report


Economist Gabriel Zucman published an extraordinary op-ed in The New York Times this week showing the impact of 40 years of Republicans transferring over $50 trillion from the pockets of the middle class into the money bins of the morbidly rich via changes in tax policy. Not only has this led to a $34.5 trillion national debt — 100% of which can be accounted for by massive tax cuts on the wealthy and corporations put into place by Ronald Reagan (1981), George W. Bush (2003), and Donald Trump (2017) — but it’s also gutted the middle class, reducing the percentage of Americans who can live comfortably in that realm from almost two-thirds of us in 1980 to around 43% of us today. (Those details are mine, not his.) Zucman explicitly calls for the entire world to take on the challenge of rescuing democracy and working class people by raising taxes on both billionaires and the corporations they use to shield themselves from taxation. It’s about damn time.



Time for higher company tax, higher income tax on the rich, and a wealth tax.

Tuesday, June 18, 2019

The Laffer curve

Source: The Guardian



It all began in 1974, when Laffer walked into a bar with Dick Cheney and Donald Rumsfeld, who were working for the Ford Administration at the time. Out of it came the “Laffer curve,” a U-shaped graph illustrating the relationship between tax rates and revenue.

The ends of the curve are basic enough – at a tax rate of 0, the government will raise $0 in revenue, and at a tax rate of 100, the government will still raise $0 in revenue because people won’t work without take-home pay.

At the extremes, the Laffer curve is correct, but that doesn’t tell us anything about the points in the middle. Laffer’s idea, however, was that a “tipping point” existed on the continuum in between, where people’s incentives to work and invest decreased because tax rates were too onerous.

From Laffer’s graph, Republicans had the academic justification to justify slashing tax rates for corporations and the rich.

President Ronald Reagan adopted Laffer’s supply-side theory wholesale in his deregulatory and low-tax agenda. In the decades since, Laffer has clung to relevancy, appearing on cable news to vehemently defend the alleged benefits of slashing taxes, even when the evidence provided otherwise.

[Read more here]

The Laffer Curve superficially makes a lot of sense.  Obviously, at 100% tax, no one will work, so tax revenue is zero, while at zero tax, no one pays any tax, so tax revenue is also zero.  The thing is, there's a third parameter/dimension, and that's how easy is it to earn that pre-tax income?  If it's easy, then you might go on working even if the tax rate is 80%.  For example, if you are in a profession, with fixed costs for your staff and premises, and clients need answers, are you really going to say, I'm not going to do this, because tax?  If you have inherited millions, what are you going to do to avoid tax?  More to the point, the work done by the middle class and above, who pay higher taxes, is determined by office hours and retirement age.  You won't work less because of higher taxes.  You might, of course, work shorter hours if you are in the office until 9 at night, but that's just because normal hours end at 5 or 5:30.  And frankly, that's a better life-work balance anyway.  Working class people, paid by the hour, won't work more because taxes are cut, because their tax rate is already low.

At any rate, Laffer drew his curve peaking at 50%.  Even if the peak is higher (60%?  70%?) it still means that if we are on the low side of the curve, cutting taxes reduces overall tax revenue.  Cutting the top marginal tax rate from 80% to 70% might well increase tax revenues.  But by Laffer's own reckoning, cutting them from 30% to 20% will not.

Moreover, if tax rates above 50% inhibit endeavour, then surely that applies also to welfare claw-back rates?  These happen when you are receiving welfare and you earn some additional money.  In Australia, for example, the clawback rate for the dole starts at 50%, then rises to 60%, and that's without counting the cost of other benefits which are withdrawn as income rises.  If there are disincentive effects for the tender rich, surely they exist at the other end of the income scale too?

There's also the point that $2 to a beggar represents far far more than $2 to a millionaire.   This is the whole argument behind a progressive income tax, where the tax rate rises as income rises.  The wealthy benefit from expenditure by the collective entities such as municipalities, states/provinces and the nation.  Police, defence, roads, hospitals, schools, street lights are all paid for by everyone.  Plus, reduced inequality makes society, including the rich, safer. 

Like many insights from the neo-liberal consensus, there is some truth in the Laffer curve.  Only, it's applied even when its results are destructive, because those who advocate it either don't really understand it, or worse, do, but want to cut their contributions to society anyway.

Tuesday, February 5, 2013

The failure of American capitalism

The charts below (via Peter Whiteford of the Australian National University in Canberra) are most interesting.  On the same scale (so comparison is facilitated) they show the average annual growth rate in real income by decile for men and for women.  So, taking Australia as an example, they show how, over the quarter century from 1980 to 2005, men in the lowest decile (i.e., the poorest 10 % of the population) had a real (i.e., after inflation) growth in their incomes of around 0.5% per annum, or roughly 13% compounded over the whole period.  During the same period, women in the lowest decile had income growth in real terms of around 1.4% per annum.  Notice how men in the top decile--the richest 10%--had annual growth of 1.5%,  or a cumulative increase of 45%, so that income inequality among men increased, between men and women decreased, and within women increased a little.  I expect much of this difference was because of the decline of blue-collar jobs in manufacturing as Ozzie industries faced a decline in protective tariffs, whereas women weren't doing blue-collar jobs, and were also entering the labour force in a big way for the first time.

Now look at little Finland's real income growth rates.  Once again, women's incomes have grown faster than men's, but the overall growth rate has been higher and much more equal than in Australia.  In fact, almost all deciles across the spectrum had real income rises of 64%.

The United States' chart is the shocker:  Over the 25 years, for men, the poorest 10% had falling real incomes, by (I'm reading this off the chart) about 0.6% per annum.  That's a 14% decline over 25 years.  The richest had real income rises of 0.8% per annum, which over the whole period equals 22%.   Once again, women did better than men as gender income inequalities were reduced.  But notice this: apart from Canada, the total growth for all deciles was lower than in any other country.  And this was before the GFC (2008 and ongoing).  All the "socialist" countries did better than the US.  These are all countries where business is privately owned, but individuals have a comprehensive welfare safety net, including such things as universal free health care, the dole, income support, progressive income tax, etc.

The argument for the extreme dog-eat-dog form of capitalism in the US with all it entails is that even though it produces greater inequality within the populace, it produces greater income growth for everybody.  Yet this is clearly not true.  And that is very interesting indeed.



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Tuesday, August 16, 2011

America is rotting at the core




An excellent guest article in Melbourne's The Age newspaper, by Hugh White from the Lowy Institute.

[...] until now it has been easy to assume that America itself is not in decline: that the global power shift is driven by China's growing strength, not by American weakness. China might grow stronger, but America would remain a uniquely vibrant, resilient and innovative country, and a beacon to the world.
Now one has to wonder. It is possible that we are witnessing not one but two remarkable national transformations, as America stumbles while China ascends. If so, that will make the shifting power balance between them much faster, more destabilising and more risky than we thought.

[...]

As manufacturing has declined, its place has been taken by new ''knowledge'' industries such as finance and IT. But these industries do not create the vast numbers of well-paid jobs that once provided the bedrock of American society. Instead they provide very high paying jobs for relatively few people. This produces the second big long-term change in America's economy - the stagnation in average incomes.

While the relatively few people who work at the top end of America's growth industries have done very well, average incomes have hardly risen for the past 30 years. That's a very sharp contrast to what's happened in Australia, for example, where average incomes have been rising steadily.

[...]


Which brings us to politics. Clearly America's political system has always been untidy, but it has mostly produced good government. Governing America has, however, become harder over the past few decades. Politics everywhere is first and foremost about choosing how to distribute wealth. Until recently the choices have always been relatively easy in America, because there has been a lot of wealth to go around. Now there is, relatively speaking, less to go round, the choices become harder, and the struggles over them intensify.

Several things then happen. First, the debt grows, as both government and people try to avoid choices by borrowing money. Second, politics becomes polarised, as voters scrabble harder for the choices that suit them best. Third, people become susceptible to any politician who can convince them that somehow the hard choices do not have to be made.

Americans believed George W. Bush when he said they could invade Iraq and cut taxes. And they believed Barack Obama's beguiling mantra. ''Yes, we can'' was a promise to Americans that they did not have to make hard choices - a promise he could never keep. Now many Americans seem to believe the Tea Party that cutting taxes will fix everything. As if.



[Update, 18/9/2025.

The continued rise in inequality in countries which continue to follow the false god of neo-liberalism has led to a lurch to the Right in the politics, pretty much what I have been saying since I started this blog all those years ago.  

Progressive parties need to ditch neo-liberalism now, or they will go on losing:

  • Tax the rich
  • make sure the minimum wage rises by at least the inflation rate
  • make health care free for everybody
  • break up monopolies
  • raise company tax
  • reverse privatisation
  • free, excellent education for everyone. ]