by Dan Mitchell | Jun 6, 2011 | Big Government, Blogs, Economics, Government Spending, Laffer Curve
My good friend Veronique de Rugy of the Mercatus Center at George Mason University did a very illuminating interview with Bloomberg about the serial inaccuracy of government fiscal forecasts. Veronique uses health care as an example, giving particular attention to the...
by Dan Mitchell | May 4, 2011 | Big Government, Blogs, Economics, Government Spending, Laffer Curve, Taxation
As I have explained elsewhere, tax increases are a bad idea – unless you favor bigger government. And I’ve already added my two cents to the tax debate between Senator Coburn and Grover Norquist regarding the desirability of higher taxes. So it won’t surprise anyone...
by CF&P | Apr 3, 2011 | Blogs, Economics, Laffer Curve, Taxation
A new study from the Adam Smith Institute in the United Kingdom provides overwhelming evidence that class-warfare tax policy is grossly misguided and self-destructive. The authors examine the likely impact of the 10-percentage point increase in the top income tax...
by Dan Mitchell | Mar 30, 2011 | Economics, Laffer Curve, Tax Competition, Tax Harmonization, Taxation
Jeffrey Sachs of Columbia University is a big booster of the discredited notion that foreign aid is a cure-all for poverty in the developing world, but he is now branching out and saying silly things about policy in other areas. In a column for the Financial Times, he...
by Dan Mitchell | Mar 13, 2011 | Blogs, Economics, Tax Competition, Taxation
I don’t particularly like soccer and I’m not normally a fan of the research of Professor Emannuel Saez, so it is rather surprising that I like Professor Saez’s new research on taxes and soccer. While Saez may have a reputation for doing work that often is used by...