by Dan Mitchell | Jan 11, 2024 | Blogs, Economics, Taxation
There are three reasons to be a knee-jerk supporter of tax cuts (or to be a knee-jerk opponent of tax increases). The morality-driven libertarian argument that people should be able to keep the income they earn.The starve-the-beast...
by Dan Mitchell | Jan 9, 2024 | Blogs, Taxation
The Laffer Curve is the common-sense notion that changes in tax rates lead to changes in taxable income. But, as I explain in this clip from a TV program in Hawaii, that doesn’t mean tax cuts “pay for themselves.” Before any readers accuse me of being an...
by Dan Mitchell | Jan 8, 2024 | Blogs, Free Market, Taxation
In Part I of this series, we looked at the many pro-market reforms that turned Estonia into an “improbable success.” For Part II, let’s look at fiscal policy. And we’ll start with the country’s best feature: Estonia has a very simple and fair flat...
by Dan Mitchell | Dec 27, 2023 | Blogs, States, Tax Competition, Taxation
Time for the final segment of my five-part series for 2023 on blue-to-red tax migration (previous versions here, here, here, and here). We’ll start with this table showing what has happened in America’s 10-largest states. You should notice a...
by Dan Mitchell | Dec 24, 2023 | Blogs, Taxation
Since governments have a terrible tendency to waste money, I’m a big fan of tax avoidance. For instance, even though I don’t like itemized deductions for things like charitable contributions and home mortgage interest, I am glad...