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Indeed, it seems that the president and the Democrats are determined to insure that the now 50 percent or so of Americans who do not pay income tax are able to maintain this privileged status....
Given the current recession, the president and key Democrats have concluded that the right course of action is to steepen the level of progressivity in the income tax. When combined with other taxes, this stratagem could easily bring marginal tax rates for wealthy Americans—especially those making over one million dollars—over the 50 percent mark, and perhaps as high as 70 percent....
Misleading, apples-to-oranges comparison. Also, I'd like to see the math on how exactly he gets to the 50-70 percent number.
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Rather, the president seems to think that no matter how high the current marginal tax rates, the correct social policy is to move them upward. As such, he cannot explain why the top marginal tax rate for the rich should not approach 100 percent as they accumulate more and more wealth. After all, why not push the limits if efforts to redistribute wealth do not at some point impede its creation?
Complete strawman.
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To explain why, let us start with the premise that the defenders of any progressive tax have to give some principled account of the optimal degree of tax progressivity. They have to identify which of the infinite number of progressive tax schedules they embrace, and then explain why it is best.
No they don't. They, like anyone else advocating a particular policy (including the flat-tax advocates) simply have to explain why whatever policy they embrace is better than the status quo and whatever other plausible alternatives are being suggested. In short, you just have to prove "better", not "perfect".
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A progressive tax is far harder to administer than any flat tax. A flat tax, in its most rigorous form, taxes everything from the first to the last dollar at the same rate....Under a progressive system, the amount of a tax owed depends both on the person who earns the income and the year in which that income is received. Given the taxing difference between high and low brackets, high net-worth taxpayers have strong incentives to shift their taxable income to their low income relatives, artificial tax entities, into low income periods, or all three. Any government that is determined to enforce its progressive system has to close these legal loopholes, which means the creation of complex rules to deal with partnerships, trusts, and corporations, all vehicles that allow money earned by one individual to appear on the tax forms filed by others. But, these various devices are so critical to the effective operation of the economy that it is impossible to ban their use or to decree that their incomes be taxed at the highest marginal rate.
With the exception of shifting to low income relatives, all of those complications are equally applicable to the "flat tax" system the author is discussing - i.e. a system that "taxes everything from the first to the last dollar at the same rate". He says nothing about treating all sources of income the same, and in fact, he says that artificial entities such as corporations are so critical that they can't be banned. The difference between a flat tax system and a progressive tax system is that the latter has escalating rates while the former does not.
Simplification of the tax code by treating all sources of income the same, closing loopholes, establishing pass-through treatment of corporate income, etc., is equally possible in either system and is therefore not a valid means of differentiating them.
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Unfortunately, all the money that is spent in creative tax planning (which gets an added fillip from the efforts to minimize exposure to gift and estate taxes) is tax deductible, reducing yet again government revenues by sparking high-powered schemes that would never see the light of day in a world without taxes, or, more importantly, in a world of flat taxation.
Again, tax simplification issues are applicable to a system with flat rates and one with progressive rates.
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steeper progressivity, of the sort that the Democrats want, will only intensify socially wasteful efforts to avoid high tax brackets. In addition, high tax rates will quickly translate into fewer new business ventures that could yield more jobs and better products to consumers in the United States and abroad.
Yes, most everyone agrees that at some point, marginal rates can be so high and so steeply progressive that they trigger widespread avoidance and choke off growth, but no mainstream economists think we're anywhere near that point yet. Indeed, the evidence suggests that there's plenty of room for both higher rates and strong growth - we've had much higher top rates in both the recent and distant past coupled with strong, even booming, growth.
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During the past several years, wages have stagnated for people up and down the income ladder.
This is a fudge at best.
Wages may have stagnated (though I'd like to see his evidence for that regarding high-end wages), but
income at the top of the ladder certainly has not. Quite the opposite in fact.
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A slow economy imposes implicit taxes on untaxed individuals.
True, but again, there's no reason to think a progressive tax system leads to a slower economy than a flat tax system. Further, speed isn't the only factor - the distribution of gains matters.
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A large number of Americans are incentivized to either support or tolerate tax increases on the rich. Why? It is a lot easier to vote for increases in government spending when all the additional costs are borne by other individuals....The willingness to call for tax increases is dulled, however, when rates are flat. Then, the proponents of tax increases know for certain that they will have to foot their part of the bill for each new program.
This argument is only partially valid because it ignores the possibility of deficit spending, which is the way the author's political allies have managed things. Also, it's equally easy to vote
against increases in government spending that would arguably benefit the economy (e.g. infrastructure, education, health care) when you don't personally need (or, more likely, fail to recognize the benefits you derive from) the services provided by that spending.
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Unfortunately, Democrats think that progressive taxation has desirable redistributive effects with few adverse economic effects. But today’s profound fiscal malaise should offer them a wake-up call: their views on taxation hurt the constituency that they most want to help.
We've had a decade of decreasing tax rates, and tax revenues are lower (as a percentage of GDP) than they've been in half a century. It is simply not credible to lay the current state of the economy at the feet of a Democratic tax policy that hasn't been in effect since the 1990s.