Why Current Tax Policy Will Impede U.S. Economic Recovery
In the preliminary edition of its Economic Outlook No. 86 released November 19, the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, emphasized that raising corporate income taxes is not only the wrong answer for cash-strapped governments in the current economic environment but that approach will inherently impede a recovery.
From the report:
“Most taxes have adverse effects on economic performance by distorting incentives to work, save and invest. Raising taxes therefore could be costly. Indeed, GDP could fall by 1 to 1.5% if the overall tax/income ratio were increased to provide revenue equal to 2% of GDP (OECD, 2003). A rise in the tax ratio would be particularly harmful if it was concentrated on corporate or labour income taxes; increasing indirect taxes and taxes on immovable property would be much less costly. In particular, the estimates in Arnold (2008) suggest that the economic cost of raising government revenue by increasing taxes on labour income could be up to five times higher than that from raising the same amount of revenue from higher indirect taxes.”
Raising a corporate tax rate that is already the second highest among the G20 will push more companies – and therefore jobs – out of the U.S. At the very time that unemployment is reaching new highs in America, the tax policy put forth by Congress to pay for health care reform is forcing jobs overseas. Cutting the corporate tax rate will create jobs and expand the dwindling individual tax base. The issue is not figuring out how to divide the proverbial pie, but rather how to expand it.
Tags: Budget Deficit, Congress, enterprise risk management, IRS, OECD, tax, Tax legislation, Tax Reform