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Wednesday, January 4, 2012

Taxing Doesn't work like THEY think.... A Politically Incorrect Look At Marginal Tax Rates

Taxing Doesn't work like THEY think....

A Politically Incorrect Look At Marginal Tax Rates

 


In my last piece, The Laffer Curve and Austrian Economics, I argued that the “Laffer Maxima” moves depending on where the economy is in the boom-bust credit cycle. I used an example of a marginal restaurant business in the bust phase, which fails when the income tax rate on the people who live nearby rises by 100 basis points.
In that piece, I did not intend to address the impact of taxes on the “middle class” vs. taxes on “the rich”.  A reader raised the question however, and thus motivated me to write this piece.
As I implied in that piece, the middle class are obliged to cut their spending dollar for dollar with any increase in any tax that they must pay.  I stated that this is because their budget is zero-sum, especially in the bust phase.  This leads to an important point: a dollar of tax increase here must necessarily decrease spending by a dollar. And this is just the primary impact. When this decrease forces the marginal business under, the secondary and tertiary impacts may be far in excess of one dollar.
In my example, the marginal restaurant had 8 employees, and a mortgage on some fixtures and tenant improvements.  Ignoring the impacts to the vendors of tomato sauce and mozzarella cheese, the default on perhaps $100,000 in debt is very significant.  And so is putting 8 people out of work.
In the bust phase, the destruction wrought by this tax that most people would consider to be “small”, is anything but small. And of course this process occurs all over the country.
It’s worth noting (though I do not intend to go into detail in this piece) that part of the problem is that the middle class has very little savings.  They live almost entirely on their cash flow, which is inelastic.
But what happens when taxes are increased on “the rich”? Is it not “fair” to redistribute wealth to even out the gaps between the “rich” and the rest of us? What happens if we increase taxes on the “rich”?
One cannot look at the economy on the basis of consumption only. It is important to understand capital accumulation and decumulation.
If a business sells $100,000 worth of product, and it cost $50,000 to make and sell, then they have a $50,000 profit. This is still true, even if they buy a $50,000 manufacturing machine. The business should treat the machine as capital which depreciates over its expected lifetime.
Likewise, if a business is neglecting its tooling, not investing in research and development, and deferring maintenance, it may seem to generate a “profit”.  But this is illusory. In an accurate assessment, it is consuming its capital. If it cannot allocate some of its “profits” towards capital, it is in reality consuming itself. It will eventually go out of business.
And this is important to understand when it comes to assessing taxes on “the rich”.  While there are some “rich” people who earn staggering salaries (e.g. actors and athletes), most “rich” are wealthy because they own productive assets and investments.
One can’t understand the impact of taxes on the rich (nor see it immediately) just by looking at macro economic data.  The “1%” do not reduce their personal consumption if taxes are increased on either incomes or capital gains. This is because they don’t spend all of their income, much less net worth, on consumption.
One needs to understand the concepts of investment, and risk-adjusted rate of return. Obviously, whatever portion of a rich man’s wealth is taken away in taxes will not be invested. The wealth will be consumed, either by the government, or those to whom the government gives it.
An increase in tax serves to replace investment with consumption. This may even boost GDP that year or even for a few years. But eventually, the destruction of capital will be felt in the economy.
This is important, because capital is the leverage on human effort. We don’t work any harder or any longer today than people did 10,000 years ago, but we are vastly more productive due to capital accumulation.  If we deliberately enact policies to decumulate capital in favor of present consumption, this would have a disastrous effect on our quality of life.
There is a more complex and pernicious effect of increasing taxes on the rich. And it is politically incorrect to say it. But it needs to be said.  We need less pandering and more honest discussion.  So bear with me.
Let’s compare and contrast to the wage earner. If the tax on a wage earner who makes $8 per hour goes up 10%, the wage earner may work an additional 10% more hours (if he can find the work), or he must spend 10% less.
The one percenter, however, has different choices. He is investing his wealth to generate a profit. For every investment, he calculates the risks and the returns if the investment is successful. He must then subtract the tax. If the net result does not justify the risk, he won’t invest.  The higher the tax, the more possible investments he will pass over, because they fail this test.  He always has an alternative: the Treasury bond.  Only if the risk-adjusted rate of return exceeds the Treasury will the rich man invest.
If he chooses not to invest, the result is that innovative start-up technology companies, energy exploration projects, new drugs and medical devices are starved for funding. But Treasury bonds go up and up, as does the consumption subsidized by the government.
This piece should not be taken as a recommendation to raise the taxes of the poor wage earner. But if one looks at the true economic impact of taxes, I think I have shown that taxing the rich hurts the economy—especially in the long term.
The correct solution is to cut spending, and cut it some more, and then cut it again, and then really begin to cut. But that is outside the scope of this piece.
© Dec 31, 2011 by Keith Weiner
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18 comments to A Politically Incorrect Look At Marginal Tax Rates

  • MarketsAlwaysFail
    There is a big gaping hole in your analysis. What does the government do with the money it takes from the 1%?
    If the money is spent on preventative healthcare (aka “Obamacare), better infrastructure, or education, these investments will yield long-term productivity increases.
    Notice that these three examples are investments that the 1% is *unable* to make. George Soros does not spend his money identifying pre-diabetic middle-aged people. The Koch Brothers do not pay for inner-city math tutors and Paris Hilton does not build highways.
    It is true, these things will prevent certain private-sector investments from being made. But, given the current lack of demand and low interest rates, it is obvious that the 1% can’t think of any investments to make. Otherwise they would be making them.
    Not to mention the disturbing tendency of the 1% to make foreign investments instead of American investments. Giving money to rich people fails because of the Law Of Unintended Consequences — the shills for teh 1% never thought that their idols would betray us by investing in Brazil and Beijing instead of Baltimore.
    But they did.
    • Californio
      Government is about 20% efficient in Wealth Re-Distribution, 80 cents of every dollars goes down the drain as a cost of the bumbling bureaucracy. The Fallacy is that Government is efficient and that every dollar that goes in, comes out as a dollar of good, unfortunately that is not the case. Charities that are well run by impassioned people who donate their time can run at 90% efficiency but never Governments, it is the inverse.
      Government is a zero-sum game when it comes to what you probably call Social Justice.
      • Jesse_Fan
        /* Government is about 20% efficient in Wealth Re-Distribution, 80 cents of every dollars goes down the drain as a cost of the bumbling bureaucracy. */
        Is this all Governments or just the USA?
        Because there are responsible Governments like Norway, Sweden you know.
        How come the socialistic policies are not killing those countries? Oh wait a minute, they’re actually more prosperous than the United States.
        A Government is simply a representation of the public and if you have corrupt, greedy culture – you have corrupt, greedy politicians. Politicians don’t fall from the sky you know.
        • Keith Weiner
          Jesse,
          “How come the socialistic policies are not killing those countries?”
          They are, but it’s being masked by capital consumption.
          Do you really think that you will persuade people here that slavery is better than freedom, that central planners (with their guns, never forget that it comes out of the barrel of a gun) know better than the people from whom they take the loot? Do you really think that politicians and bureaucrats are more honest, more hard-working, smarter, more knowledgable, and more caring when they dole out Other People’s Money than people are with their own??
          • Jesse_Fan
            /* They are, but it’s being masked by capital consumption.*/
            Really? How come the Scandinavians have very low public debt to GDP levels?
            /* Do you really think that you will persuade people here that slavery is better than freedom, that central planners (with their guns, never forget that it comes out of the barrel of a gun) know better than the people from whom they take the loot? */
            LOL- Developed Scandinavian countries practice slavery in your opinion then? Wow!
            Free market has given rise to ginormous banker bonuses and powerful corporations who have bought and paid the Congress. Unlike rampant legalized corruption in the United States, the Scandinavians are actually better off. Doubting me?
            Unlike your accusation that Swedes and the Finnish practice slavery, I have data to back my corruption claim.
            /* Do you really think that politicians and bureaucrats are more honest, more hard-working, smarter, more knowledgable, and more caring when they dole out Other People’s Money than people are with their own??*/
            The problem with any complex dynamic system (such as the economy) is there are human imperfections, so you need the system to be adaptive and flexible. If there’s too much debt that the “conservative right” keeps harping on, then there’s also too much wealth in too few hands.
            The crony capitalist system of America is degenerative and it is in its death throes.
          • Keith Weiner
            Jesse,
            When someone takes something from you by force, that is not freedom. That is a degree of slavery. It would be no hyperbole to add up income tax + social security tax + healthcare tax + VAT/GST/sales tax + property tax + fuel tax + etc and say that this is the degree of one’s slavery.
            By the way, and I find this message must be repeated over and over and over again. It is not a free market that doled out bonuses to the CEO’s of wealth-destroying banks. A guy named Keith Weiner wrote a piece at a site called dailycapitalist.com. Check it out:
            http://dailycapitalist.com/2011/11/03/capitalism-death-by-a-thousand-cuts/
    • Keith Weiner
      Mr. Fail,
      Your argument is, in essence, that the central planners will do good stuff with the loot.
      The results are in, and I think they prove otherwise.
  • Pedro
    When did “not taxing 100% of income” become “giving money to the rich?”
  • Californio
    Another great article Keith.
    • Keith Weiner
      Thanks Californio! I am glad you appreciated it. And I appreciate seeing a positive comment among the Bucks, Barrys, Fails, and others who would be our slave masters.
  • Markets Always Fail Due to Government Interference
    Norway and Sweden and the rest have innovation but very little. That is because governments, well run or not, don’t innovate and these governments have most of the money and most of the money is spent on life style. But Danes live in tiny houses and apartments and drive tiny cars or even have to share cars like a married couple I know do with friends. And this couple is a highly respected and compensated architect and a nurse.
    My friend who is a Swede said that Swedes are more and more paying cash for service for medical care so they don’t have to wait and have more choices. She said they have the same lazy people in government especially medical that we do in the States. Put that in your pipe and smoke it.
    • Jesse_Fan
      /* Markets Always Fail Due to Government Interference */
      Dogma without any proof. Where’s the data?
      /* Norway and Sweden and the rest have innovation but very little.*/
      So in your opinion – only if there is innovation, the country is well-off. The people being contented in general, greater overall society well-being, extremely less prison rates, extremely less health issues, greater social mobility – all of these doesn’t matter at all?
      /* That is because governments, well run or not, don’t innovate and these governments have most of the money and most of the money is spent on life style.*/
      Spending on essentials such as schooling and health care is not “life style”; those are basic necessities in any developed country. What pipe are you smoking?
      /* My friend who is a Swede said that Swedes are more and more paying cash for service for medical care so they don’t have to wait and have more choices. She said they have the same lazy people in government especially medical that we do in the States. Put that in your pipe and smoke it.*/
      My friend who currently works in Sweden tells me that the country’s health care system is one of the best and most affordable in the world. Because of their corrupt-free governance, overall societal well-being is ranked very highly when compared to other developed countries. US doesn’t even come close.
      You can continue smoking your free market mythical pipe dream.
  • Barry
    This is a lot of academic hoo ha. What the government does with that money is important. We borrowed money to buy the Midwest from France. The US government spent money to lay telegraph lines, railroad lines, built a network of airports, subsidized the computer industry, etc. etc.
    With all due respect to Ayn Rand, we would be like Argentina or Brazil had it not been for prudent government action.
    Also, lowering taxes simply moves activity from the unreported underground sector to the reported taxable sector. No real economic growth has taken place.
    I had assumed that this was all covered in a high school history classes. I guess those classes now teach us how Ronald Reagan balanced the budget, cut taxes, and had absolutely nothing to do with the rise of Islamic fundamentalism in the South Asia.
    • Keith Weiner
      Barry,
      Did they really teach you that Argentina followed or follows the policy recommendations of Ayn Rand? *THAT* would be a load of academic hoo ha!
      P.S. I did not mention Ronald Reagan. You can put away your cap gun now.
    • Jesse_Fan
      /* What the government does with that money is important */
      Precisely. The problem with dogmatic capitalism is that they think all government spending is waste. That is pure dogma and can be shattered easily with data. To be sure, government has messed up a lot in the United States- namely the housing sector. But that does not make the Government totally incompetent at everything.
      /* I guess those classes now teach us how Ronald Reagan balanced the budget, cut taxes, */
      Ronald Reagan and the phrase “balancing the budget” are oxymorons.
  • Beauvallon
    Squire – your comments about the size of Danish apartments and cars says it all…. how American. Quantity is not synonymous with quality.
  • George
    Jesse-Fan.
    Reading your comments reminds me of discussions with norwegian communists in the 70. They all praised ussr but non of them moved over there. Funny, not? Sweden went bust in the 90 with their socialdemocracy. It is said they do well today but their production is either closed down or china owned. Until the 90 norwegians went to Sweden to earn money, today swedes are the “latinos” in Norway. By ten thousands doing all the dirty jobs. So Norway is doing well? The state budget has been negative since the 70. Had it not been for hugde oil revenues Norway would have been bust many times over. Today it is a banana republic. There is little activity other than the state. (~70% of gdp) Even oil companies like Statoil (state owned) listed in NY dont start any projects without state subsidies. Its a heaven for salary people. Doing business is for particullary healthy people on their own expence. Ask crafty foreigners in your own country. Non of them ever conidered Norway. The only assets norwegians have are their overpriced houses and oil. Peak oil was in 2000 (oil business started in mid 70). Due the 2010 state budget in 2022 the revenues from oil will be 4% of today. We will see how this heaven fares then. I guess they will raise taxes (the state has enormous liabilities). Paying over 70% in taxes today I have a “huge” potential you must agree.. Due to raising costs I will not afford to continue my bisuness in a couple of years anyway. I plan to become a salary man before that time.
  • George
    Ah. Forgot the health services. The best in the world as is said in Norway. You can get a x ray examination in 3-4 months. Simple surgery in 6- 9 months. A coloscopy next year. Yeah! Its allways fun to see the faces of foreigners/ turists when it downs on them its not hours or days but weeks and more likely months. And you cant buy yourself out of this mess. A few, count on your fingers, rich people go abroad when needed. And yes cars are small but very costly. 70% of cars are company purchased. Would you need that if you could afford a car by yourself? Mean age of cars is 15 years (only Albania has older).
 

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