by Dan Mitchell | Oct 14, 2011 | Blogs, Taxation, VAT
I’m very enthusiastic – but also a little worried – about Herman Cain’s tax plan. So when I got the opportunity to write a short column for the New York Times, I explained that his proposal was very good tax policy, in large part because it is based on the same...
by Dan Mitchell | Oct 12, 2011 | Blogs, Economics, Taxation, VAT
I like the overall approach of Herman Cain’s 9-9-9 tax plan. As I recently wrote, it focuses on lower tax rates, elimination of double taxation, and repeal of corrupt and inefficient loopholes. But I included a very important caveat. The intermediate stage of his...
by Dan Mitchell | Aug 31, 2011 | Big Government, Blogs, Economics, Government Spending, Taxation, VAT
I’m normally disappointed when religious figures comment on economics, particularly since they often turn the individual call to charity into a blank check for government-coerced redistribution. This runs contrary to individual choice, free will, and morality. So I’m...
by Dan Mitchell | Aug 29, 2011 | Big Government, Blogs, Taxation, VAT
The White House has announced that it is nominating Alan Krueger, a professor at Princeton, to be the new Chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers. In a Freudian copy-editing slip, the Fox News story (at least as of 8:44 a.m.) says “Krueger’s job will be to...
by Dan Mitchell | Jul 26, 2011 | Blogs, Government Spending, Taxation, VAT
I testified before the House Ways & Means Committee earlier today. As always, my trip inside the belly of the beast was an interesting adventure. The tax-writing committee was holding a hearing on the value-added tax. I was on a panel with five other witnesses,...