Cutting The Corporate Tax Rate

By Pejman Yousefzadeh Posted in | | Comments (2) / Email this page » / Leave a comment »

It's an excellent idea, as Greg Mankiw points out:

Cutting corporate taxes is not the kind of idea that normally pops up in presidential campaigns. After all, voters aren't corporations. Why promise goodies for those who can't put you in office?

In fact, a corporate rate cut would help a lot of voters, though they might not know it. The most basic lesson about corporate taxes is this: A corporation is not really a taxpayer at all. It is more like a tax collector.

The ultimate payers of the corporate tax are those individuals who have some stake in the company on which the tax is levied. If you own corporate equities, if you work for a corporation or if you buy goods and services from a corporation, you pay part of the corporate income tax. The corporate tax leads to lower returns on capital, lower wages or higher prices -- and, most likely, a combination of all three.

A cut in the corporate tax as Mr. McCain proposes would initially give a boost to after-tax profits and stock prices, but the results would not end there. A stronger stock market would lead to more capital investment. More investment would lead to greater productivity. Greater productivity would lead to higher wages for workers and lower prices for customers.

Populist critics deride this train of logic as "trickle-down economics." But it is more accurate to call it textbook economics. Students in introductory economics courses learn that the burden of a tax does not necessarily stay where the Congress chooses to put it. That lesson is especially relevant when thinking about the corporate tax.

In a 2006 study, the economist William C. Randolph of the Congressional Budget Office estimated who wins and who loses from this tax. He concluded that "domestic labor bears slightly more than 70 percent of the burden."

Of course, as Professor Mankiw appears to fear, any attempt to cut the corporate tax rate will run into the "you are cutting taxes for the richest amongst us!" canard that works to stop the implementation of so much good economic policy. But that doesn't make any of what Professor Mankiw suggests into bad policy. It just makes the demagogues who use such populist shibboleths dishonest and irresponsible.


Cutting The Corporate Tax Rate 2 Comments (0 topical, 2 editorial, 0 hidden) Post a comment »

How is it possible for McCain to tell his supporters that he is for cutting the corporate tax, while at the same time supporting a Cap and Trade scheme for carbon credits which, by conservative estimates will generate $7 Trillion in new taxes on corporations by the year 2050?

Heritage estimates that just the preliminary standard setting for every industry (business?) in America will cost a cool $1 Trillion. This before the Government collects one dime in taxes for carbon credits.

And we thought McCain was interested in cutting the deficit and for reduced Government intrusion. Silly us!

 
Redstate Network Login:
(lost password?)


©2008 Eagle Publishing, Inc. All rights reserved. Legal, Copyright, and Terms of Service