Tax cut
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A tax cut is a reduction in the rate of tax charged by a government, for example on personal or corporate income. Whether a given tax cut will increase or decrease total tax revenues is much discussed by both economists and politicians.
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[edit] Economic theory
The immediate effects of a tax cut are, generally, a decrease in the real income of the government and an increase in the real income of those whose tax rate has been lowered. In the longer term, however, the effect on government income may be reversed, depending on the response that tax-payers make. Supply-siders argue that tax cuts for corporations and wealthy individuals provide them with an incentive for investments which stimulate so much economic activity that even at the lower rate more net tax revenue will be collected.
The longer term macroeconomic effects of a tax cut are not predictable in general, because they depend on how the taxpayers use their additional income and how the government adjusts to its reduced income. Four idealised scenarios can be hypothesised:
- Government cuts its expenditure, and taxpayers increase theirs, spending the money on commodities sourced from within the country. This combination is macroeconomically neutral, but advocates of a free-market economy argue that it improves economic welfare, since people are more accurate than the government in spending money on commodities that they actually want.
- Government maintains its expenditure (thus incurring debt), and taxpayers increase theirs, spending the money on commodities sourced from within the country. This combination provides a stimulus to the economy, and it is on these grounds that advocates of supply-side economics frequently argue for tax cuts. It should lead to economic growth, bringing about greater general prosperity, though unless managed carefully it will also lead to inflation. A government making tax cuts and incurring debt usually hopes that the economic stimulus of the tax cut will be large enough to produce a long-term increase in tax revenues, allowing the debt to be paid off in the future. If that does not occur then the government can be left with a severe budgetary crisis.
- Government cuts its expenditure, and taxpayers either save their increased income or spend it on commodities sourced from outside the country. This combination has a deflationary effect on the country's economy, and could lead to balance of payments problems, though it will tend to expand the economies of the countries sourcing the commodities that people purchase. However, if saving predominates over the purchase of imports, there may be an indirect stimulus to the economy because the additional supply of capital tends to reduce the interest rate.
- Government maintains its expenditure (thus incurring debt), and taxpayers either save their increased income or spend it on commodities sourced from outside the country. This combination is not inherently deflationary, but it contributes to balance of payments difficulties which may have secondary deflationary effects and as noted above may lead to a government budgetary crisis with a painful readjustment to follow.
In practice it is likely that a mixture of these effects will occur, and the net effect of any tax cut will depend on the balance between them. It will therefore be a function of the overall state of the national economy. In conditions where most goods and services (especially those frequently purchased out of discretionary income, such as consumer durables) are produced domestically, a tax cut is more likely to provide a macroeconomic stimulus than in conditions where most consumer durables are imported. Furthermore, the actual effect will inevitably be difficult to discern, because of numerous other changes in the economy between the time when a tax cut is proposed and the time when its full effects would be realized.
If government does reduce its expenditure to accommodate tax cuts, there must necessarily be reductions in government services, and there may also be a reduction of the government's capacity to redistribute income to reduce income inequalities. Critics of tax cuts argue that this leads to a fall in overall economic welfare because the effects fall disproportionately on those with the lowest incomes.
[edit] Tax cuts in the United States
In the United States in recent decades, most "supply-siders" have been Republicans (though the largest individual tax cut was initially proposed by President Kennedy from the Democratic Party), with the belief that cutting the tax rate would stimulate investment and spending, with overall beneficial effects (including increased tax revenues). President Ronald Reagan signed tax cuts into law and while it took some time, these tax cuts arguably stimulated a doubling in total tax revenues (from five hundred billion to one trillion dollars). Don Lambro of the Washington Times credits the Reagan tax cuts with the eventual surpluses of the 1990s.[1] Democratic Governor Bill Richardson in recent years has supported tax cuts to spur job growth.[2] The most recent tax cut were derived from President George W. Bush.[citation needed] Supporters state that this gap has occurred because there are so many poor immigrants entering in to the country with no professional skills and little education. They also state that the importance of a college education is growing dramatically, and those without it can not compete in a global economy.[citation needed] Supporters state that the Bush tax cuts helped the poor the most, as the largest income tax rate drops were given to the those with the lower incomes.[3]
[edit] Tax cuts in Canada
The 2006 Federal Budget announced the decrease of the GST from 7% to 6%, and subsequently to 5% over the next five years.
[edit] Capital gains tax
Much discussion has occurred regarding the optimum capital gains tax rate, with some advocates calling for tax cuts in the belief that a lower rate (e.g., under 25%) will provide an incentive to investors to sell old stocks and invest in new stocks -- which supply siders maintain encourages the creation of new jobs, reduces unemployment, and has the paradoxical effect of increasing tax revenues more or less immediately, an idea first proposed by economist Arthur Laffer while an advisor to Ronald Reagan (See Laffer curve). In addition, a recent report issued by the Cato Institute argues that the burden of capital gains tax is felt by the poor much more than the rich. The report quotes a painting contractor as saying: "You're looking at a poor man who thinks the capital gains tax cut is the best thing that could happen to this country, because that's when the work will come back. People say capital gains are for the rich, but I've never been hired by a poor man." While this paradoxical effect is clearly possible in principle, opponents of capital gains tax cuts are not persuaded that it occurs in practice. They therefore argue that the rate of capital gains tax should be raised, since it is paid primarily by the better off, who can afford to contribute disproportionately to government revenues
[edit] Notes
- ^ Lambro, Donald (2004-02-04). Budget myths and mischief. The Washington Times. Retrieved on 2006-02-17.
- ^ Magers, Phil (2003-02-19). New Mexico cuts taxes to stimulate economy. United Press International. Retrieved on 2007-02-12.
- ^ Riedl, Brian M. (2007-01-29). Ten Myths About the Bush Tax Cuts. The Heritage Foundation. Retrieved on 2007-02-12.