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What Could Be Better Than Low Taxes? According to Biden's Treasury Sec, Everything

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According to Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen, global corporate income taxes have been “racing to the bottom” for many years. This must be nipped in the bud, in her opinion, if prosperity is to be attained.

Say what? Taxes are too low? This will be news to taxpayers!

As Yellen sees matters, Adam Smith’s “wealth of nations” does not emanate from the private sector. Rather, government is the engine of growth. And the more money it has, the better off we will all be.

But the public sector is fueled by taxation. Hence the need to raise its level and to keep on going in this direction. What is the optimal size of government in the economy in her perspective? She does not say. All we know for sure is that it is “more” than at present.

But there is a worm in the apple. If you keep on plucking the golden goose, Yellen is economist enough to know that eventually, this fowl will seek greener pastures. It will strive mightily to move to lower tax jurisdictions.

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This is in sharp contrast to AOC, who takes the opposite point of view: The rich will sit there and take it, forever.

What to do then about this “worm?” Why, convince the other countries, too, to raise their tax rates.

If they do, then there would be no runaway multinational corporations; they will have no place to hide. Our treasury secretary is thus seeking to convince other members of the G-20 to follow the U.S. lead in the direction of “more.”

In other words, we and the other advanced economies should in effect form a tax cartel. We should all agree among ourselves not to keep “racing to the bottom” taxwise, in an attempt to compete with each other to garner more corporate investment to our shores.

Is Yellen dead wrong on taxation?

But basic economics 101 teaches that cartels, whether of oil or steel or anything else for that matter, tend to break up. They are vulnerable to two threats.

The internal one is that each member has an incentive to “cheat.” To raise prices, to be sure, but then to offer hidden “discounts” to customers so as to gain the inner track vis-à-vis other cartel members. Yellen’s tax cartel is exempt from this threat. Tax rates are a matter of public record.

But then there is the external menace to cartels. If the producers succeed in raising prices and profits (demand elasticities have to be just so), other outside firms will enter the industry to take advantage of the benefits created by the cartel.

Is Yellen’s would-be tax cartel subject to this sort of threat? Well, there are no corporations located on the moon or Mars, at least not yet, so her scheme is safe so far. But there are over 200 countries on the third rock from the sun.

True, the top 20 account for a wildly disproportionate share of world GDP. But still, those in the second and third deciles would be in a good position to cock a snook at Yellen by refusing to go along with her “more and more” tax plans. If they refrained, and thus stayed put, tax-wise, where they are, right at the “bottom,” that might well take quite a bit of wind out of Yellen’s sails.

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A word about that “bottom”: When all U.S. taxes are taken into account (federal, state and local), the portion taken by the government all too often exceeds 50 percent.

Contrast this with the evil system of feudalism, in which the serfs were required to work on the masters’ holdings for only two or at most three days every week.

Some “bottom,” Yellen.

The views expressed in this opinion article are those of their author and are not necessarily either shared or endorsed by the owners of this website. If you are interested in contributing an Op-Ed to The Western Journal, you can learn about our submission guidelines and process here.

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Walter E. Block is the Harold E. Wirth Endowed Chair and Professor of Economics at the College of Business, Loyola University New Orleans, and senior fellow at the Mises Institute.
Walter E. Block is the Harold E. Wirth Endowed Chair and Professor of Economics at the College of Business, Loyola University New Orleans, and senior fellow at the Mises Institute.

He earned his PhD in economics at Columbia University in 1972. He has taught at Rutgers, SUNY Stony Brook, Baruch CUNY, Holy Cross and the University of Central Arkansas.

He is the author of more than 600 refereed articles in professional journals, two dozen books and thousands of Op-Eds for publications including The New York Times and The Wall Street Journal. He lectures widely on college campuses, delivers seminars around the world and appears regularly on television and radio shows.

He was the the 2011 Schlarbaum Laureate at the Mises Institute and has won the Loyola University Research Award (2005, 2008), the Mises Institute’s Rothbard Medal of Freedom in 2005 and the Dux Academicus Award, Loyola University, 2007.

Prof. Block counts among his friends Ron Paul and Murray Rothbard. He was converted to libertarianism by Ayn Rand. Block is old enough to have played chess with Friedrich Hayek and once met Ludwig von Mises, and shaken his hand. He has never washed that hand since.




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