by Dan Mitchell | Aug 13, 2020 | Blogs, Economics, Laffer Curve, Taxation
Last week, I gave a presentation on the Laffer Curve to a seminar organized by the New Economic School in the nation of Georgia. A major goal was to help students understand that you can’t figure out how changes in tax rates affect tax revenues without also figuring...
by Dan Mitchell | Aug 12, 2020 | Blogs, Taxation
Speculating about tax policy in 2021, with Washington potentially being controlling by Joe Biden, Chuck Schumer, and Nancy Pelosi, there are four points to consider. The bad news is that Joe Biden has endorsed a wide range of punitive tax increases. The good news is...
by Dan Mitchell | Aug 3, 2020 | Big Government, Blogs, Taxation
There’s a reason that Greece is almost synonymous with bad economic policy. The country has endured some terrible prime ministers, most recently Alexis Tsipras of the far-left Syriza Party. Andreas Papandreou, however, wins the prize for doing the most damage. He...
by Dan Mitchell | Jul 30, 2020 | Big Government, Blogs, Economics, Government Spending, Taxation
Because of changing demographics and poorly designed entitlement programs, the burden of government spending in the United States (in the absence of genuine reform) is going to increase dramatically over the next few decades. That bad outlook will get even worse...
by Dan Mitchell | Jul 24, 2020 | Blogs, Economics, Laffer Curve, Supply Side, Taxation
I participated in a debate yesterday on “tax havens” for the BBC World Service. If you read last month’s two-part series on the topic (here and here), you already know I’m a big defender of low-tax jurisdictions. But it’s always interesting to interact with people...