Saturday, August 9, 2008
Comments on the Shared Economic Growth proposal?
Saturday, August 2, 2008
With a Weak Economy, We Need Smarter Policies
The old tricks aren’t working any more. The government’s tools for a weak economy have been to lower interest rates, borrow and spend, or have a war. Now, interest rates are so low that you can’t earn enough on your savings to keep up with inflation, the government owes $31,666 for every man, woman and child in
Here’s a radical suggestion. Let’s stop collecting taxes in foolish ways. All we need are two simple changes to our existing system.
Start with capital gains and dividends. Right now, people who earn more money in a year than you could dream of making in your lifetime pay only a 15% tax on most of that income, which is less than the Social Security and Medicare taxes that any middle class wage earner pays on their income. With patience and good planning, they pay no tax at all on their gains. Why do we have such a strange system? Economists will cite two reasons.
First, if we tax these earnings from wealth as heavily as we tax earnings from work, then the wealthy will tend to spend more of their money instead of investing it. But the government just went deeper into debt sending out billions of dollars in checks to try (not very successfully) to get people to spend money. So why are we bribing the wealthy to NOT spend money?
Second, because people can avoid having taxable gains by simply not selling their stock, having a normal tax rate on gains will tend to keep investment dollars from flowing to the best investments, which is bad for the economy. But what if instead we got corporations to pay out all of their earnings as dividends and then have to ask people to reinvest the cash? That would be a much more effective way to make money flow where it should.
Now consider corporate tax. Under our system, if a
What is the simple solution? Give corporations a deduction for paying dividends, and make up the lost tax revenue by getting rid of the capital gain benefits on the individual side and raising taxes a bit on people earning over $500,000 a year. On average, the over $500,000 group would still pay total federal and state income tax of only 37.6%. Cash would flow and jobs would grow. Wouldn’t that be smarter?
Matt Lykken is an international tax attorney and the Director of SharedEconomicGrowth.org.
Biographical information at http://www.sharedeconomicgrowth.org/home/aboutus.html