As the president yammers on about making the rich “pay their fair share,” behind the scenes his administration has suggested reducing corporate tax rates by seven points. Meanwhile, Obama’s main challenger, Mitt Romney, promised a full ten point rate cut, if elected.
Why? By international standards, American corporate taxes are obviously way too high.
The U.S. effective tax rate on new corporate investment sits at 35.6 percent today, which, write Duanjie Chen and Jack Mintz for the Cato Institute, “is almost twice the average rate for the 90 countries” the duo studied, in “Corporate Tax Competitiveness Rankings for 2012.”
The U.S. has higher corporate tax rates than France.
And India, Colombia, Brazil, Japan, Venezuela, Korea, Russia, Costa Rica, you name it. This is not something we want to be No. 1 at.
Well, at least Argentina, Chad and Uzbekistan tax at even higher rates.
There’s no consolation in others’ folly, though.
The authors look northward, to Canada, which, since 2000, made some huge adjustments downward on tax rates affecting businesses: 15 percent cuts in federal statutory tax rates, eliminating most capital taxes, removing sales taxes on capital goods, and scaling back on special preferences that tend to make taxation such a mess there as well as here. And all the while revenues from these taxes have remained stable per GDP.
Could we get lower corporate taxes, here? Well, this is not an area where those on the left can enviously eye their beloved European social democracies to make their usual, tedious case for higher taxes. Norway’s rates are ten percent lower than ours, and Sweden’s, Denmark’s and Finland’s are lower yet.
This is Common Sense. I’m Paul Jacob.
3 replies on “Tax Reductions Ahead?”
When the GOP refused to pay for the wars in the Iraq and Afghanistan or the big new drug benefit, I could no longer call myself a Republican. Every time I read where they are screaming for lower taxes despite the mounting debt I wonder what they are smoking or drinking. Watch this video that explains our national budget crisis and tell your Congressmen and Senator to WAKE UP before we are another Greece. http://www.youtube-nocookie.com/embed/EW5IdwltaAc?rel=0
Wayne — Thank you for your comment and the link. I’m even more sober and scared than I was before I watched the video. For many decades, our elected representatives have defrauded us and hocked our posterity. Not only is neither party addressing the problem, neither is the Fourth Estate. That is what I find most disturbing.
Canadian tax rates go down, tax revenue stays the same, the economy booms, the misery index goes down. Who would want that?