by Dan Mitchell | Jun 28, 2019 | Uncategorized
There’s general agreement among public finance experts that personal income taxes and corporate income taxes, on a per-dollar-collected basis, do the most economic damage. And I suspect there’s a lot of agreement that this is because these levies often have high...
by Dan Mitchell | Jun 27, 2019 | Big Government, Blogs, Government Spending, Taxation
The Congressional Budget Office just released its new long-run fiscal forecast. Most observers immediately looked at the estimates for deficits and debt. Those numbers are important, especially since America has an aging population, but they should be viewed as...
by Dan Mitchell | Jun 26, 2019 | Big Government, Blogs, Taxation
I wrote five years ago about the growing threat of a wealth tax. Some friends at the time told me I was being paranoid. The crowd in Washington, they assured me, would never be foolish enough to impose such a levy, especially when other nations such as Sweden have...
by Dan Mitchell | Jun 25, 2019 | Blogs, Europe, Taxation
I’ve argued for many years that a Clean Brexit is the right step for the United Kingdom for the simple reason that the European Union is a slowly sinking ship. Part of the problem is demographics. Europe’s welfare states are already very expensive and the relative...
by Dan Mitchell | Jun 24, 2019 | Big Government, Blogs, Bureaucracy
The Bureaucrat Hall of Fame recognizes government employees who go above and beyond the call of duty in terms of getting over-paid or being under-worked. Or both. Adding insult to injury, many recipients of this award are employed by bureaucracies that shouldn’t even...