by Dan Mitchell | May 13, 2022 | Big Government, Blogs, Taxation, VAT
As part of my (reality-based) opposition to a value-added tax, I testified to the Ways & Means Committee back in 2011. My primary argument against the VAT is that it would enable a bigger burden of government spending. I frequently share this chart, for...
by Dan Mitchell | May 3, 2022 | Blogs, Tax Competition, Tax Harmonization, Taxation
A few months ago, I reiterated my opposition to Biden’s proposed corporate tax cartel as part of a longer discussion with Australia’s Gene Tunny. The main takeaway is that the proposed “minimum global tax” is an agreement by politicians for the benefit of...
by Dan Mitchell | Apr 12, 2022 | Blogs, Economics, Taxation
Thomas Piketty is a big proponent of class-warfare tax policy because he views inequality as a horrible outcome. But a soak-the-rich policy agenda, echoed by many other academics such as Emmanuel Saez and Gabriel Zucman,...
by Dan Mitchell | Apr 7, 2022 | Blogs, Tax Competition, Taxation
I wrote a few days ago about Biden’s plan to impose punitive double taxation on dividends. But that’s not an outlier in his budget. As you can see from this table from the Tax Foundation, he wants to violate the principles of...
by Dan Mitchell | Apr 5, 2022 | Blogs, Taxation
Modern tax systems tend to have three major deviations from good fiscal policy. High marginal tax rates on productive behavior like work and entrepreneurship.Multiple layers of taxation on income that is saved and invested.Distortionary...