mike777, on 2014-September-06, 17:20, said:
If you believe taxes inhibit economic growth at some level. If you believe that in general low taxes rather than high taxes encourage economic growth. If at some point you accept that a high regulation environment inhibits innovation and a low one encourages innovation. Not zero regulations or zero taxes or zero government just a philosophy that less is better than more.
The problem is that this is too often phrased as an "I believe" versus "you believe" when there is actually evidence.
Historically, the fastest economic growth (in the US and Western Europe) occurred in the years from roughly 1945-1970. This was also the period where the large middle class really got established in most of these countries, where the benefits of growth were most broadly shared, and where trust in government was high relative to what we see today (and what we saw in the early 20th century). Republicans often speak of this era as a sort of golden age they want to go back to, and while Democrats are leery of some of the social mores of the time (treatment of women and minorities was much worse than today) there is little controversy that things were better than on an economic front. What were the tax rates in those years? At the top level they were confiscatory -- the top marginal income tax rate in the US was 90% plus for some of that period, and Kennedy (a democrat)
lowered it to 75% part way through!
More recently, when President Clinton
raised taxes especially at the top the economy boomed, despite warnings from the right. When Bush
lowered taxes at the top, the economy stalled (we had poor economic growth throughout the Bush presidency, even before the 2008 collapse). At the end of 2012 President Obama
raised the top tax rates once again, and the very slow economic recovery which started in 2009 seems to have picked up steam in the past two years (at least in terms of employment numbers, which are the primary thing being watched since the stock market recovered a long time ago).
While I know this history better for the US, my strong impression is that similar patters have held in Europe. So this is not some hypothetical "I believe" versus "you believe" -- historically economic growth has been better
and the benefits have been more broadly shared when the highest marginal rates are
higher. There are lots of logical reasons for this, but there are logical reasons against too... the historical
record ought to be the deciding voice rather than hypotheticals and false generalizations from extremes (clearly a 100% tax rate on everyone or a 0% tax rate on everyone would stifle the economy, but no one is really proposing those seriously, so who cares).
Adam W. Meyerson
a.k.a. Appeal Without Merit