principles of good tax policy panama city, panama, january 27, 2005

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Principles of Good Tax Policy Panama City, Panama, January 27, 2005

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Page 1: Principles of Good Tax Policy Panama City, Panama, January 27, 2005

Principles of Good Tax Policy

Panama City, Panama, January 27, 2005

Page 2: Principles of Good Tax Policy Panama City, Panama, January 27, 2005

Two Major Issues

What is the appropriate role of government?The classical liberal vision of small government.Or the welfare state vision of large government.

How should government be financed?Broad-base and low-rate system.Or a tax code as a tool for redistribution and social policy.

Page 3: Principles of Good Tax Policy Panama City, Panama, January 27, 2005

What is the Goal of Economic Policy?

To create conditions that encourage people to create wealth and improve their living standards.To create a large tax base so that the legitimate functions of government can be financed at low tax rates.To preserve and enhance liberty so people can enjoy freedom.

Page 4: Principles of Good Tax Policy Panama City, Panama, January 27, 2005

What is Good Tax Policy?Tax Income at one low rate, ideally no more than 20 percent.Define the tax base correctly, taxing Income only one time.Tax all income alike, since neutrality ensures economic criteria rather than tax provisions determine resource allocation.Tax only income earned inside national borders, the common-sense notion of territorial taxation.

Page 5: Principles of Good Tax Policy Panama City, Panama, January 27, 2005

Why Have a Low Tax Rate?The marginal tax rate – the burden on the next increment of income – must be kept low.A low marginal tax rate rewards productive behavior. People will work more, save more, and invest more.Incentives to hide, shelter, under-report income are lower when the marginal tax rate is reasonable.Research indicates that the marginal tax rate should be no higher than 20 percent.

Page 6: Principles of Good Tax Policy Panama City, Panama, January 27, 2005

Why Tax Income Only One Time?Many nations impose multiple layers of tax on income that is saved and invested.This is the wrong definition of the tax base.Taxes on interest, dividends, capital gains, and inheritances are examples of the discriminatory treatment of capital.This is a self-destructive policy since it harms the activity – capital formation – that all economic theories agree is necessary for economic growth and rising living standards.

Page 7: Principles of Good Tax Policy Panama City, Panama, January 27, 2005

Why Neutrality?Government should not pick winners and losers.Special preferences and penalties distort the allocation of capital and undermine efficiency, leading to lower incomes.Special preferences and penalties also encourage taxpayers to squander time and energy in search of political advantage instead of concentrating on productive behavior.

Page 8: Principles of Good Tax Policy Panama City, Panama, January 27, 2005

Why Territoriality?Governments should only tax income earned inside national borders.The other alternative – worldwide taxation – imposes high compliance costs and undermines competitiveness of companies and entrepreneurs.Territoriality respects the sovereign right of nations to control the taxation of income earned inside national borders.Worldwide taxation is superfluous for nations with competitive tax rates.

Page 9: Principles of Good Tax Policy Panama City, Panama, January 27, 2005

Benefits of Good Tax Policy

LibertySimplicityProsperityCompetitivenessOpportunityEqualityPrivacyEnforcement

Page 10: Principles of Good Tax Policy Panama City, Panama, January 27, 2005

LibertyIndividual freedom is the key benchmark of a civilized society, and a flat tax is the revenue-collecting mechanism that preserves and protects liberty.Under a flat tax, the government is not trying to control peoples’ lives.Under a flat tax, there is no attempt to penalize or reward people based on the level of income, source of income, or use of income.

Page 11: Principles of Good Tax Policy Panama City, Panama, January 27, 2005

SimplicitySimplicity is a consequence of good tax policy, particularly the elimination of double-taxation of income that is saved and invested.Labor income can be taxed in a simple manner at the individual level, with a family-based exemption to protect low-income residents.Capital income can be taxed in a simple manner at the business level, using a simple definition of income, akin to cash-flow expenditure tax.

Page 12: Principles of Good Tax Policy Panama City, Panama, January 27, 2005

ProsperityLower tax rates will encourage more productive behavior.The elimination of double-taxation will encourage more capital formation.Neutrality will encourage the more efficient allocation of capital.Territoriality will boost competitiveness of nation’s companies.

Page 13: Principles of Good Tax Policy Panama City, Panama, January 27, 2005

Prosperity…continued

The aggregate benefits would be large. Academics have found that a flat tax in the U.S. would boost long-term living standards by as much as 15 percent compared to baseline.the OECD has estimated that economies grow one-half of 1 percent (0.5 percent) faster for every 10-percentage-point reduction in marginal tax rates.

Page 14: Principles of Good Tax Policy Panama City, Panama, January 27, 2005

Prosperity…continued

The OECD even says, "the best way to improve economic performance would be to replace current wage-income and capital-income taxes by a general tax on consumption."

Page 15: Principles of Good Tax Policy Panama City, Panama, January 27, 2005

EqualityTax reform is not just about economics, it also reflects a society’s principles.A flat tax advances the principle that the law should treat everyone equally, with no special privileges or penalties.A flat tax eliminates special interest exemptions and preferences.All taxpayers pay the same tax rate, regardless of the number of lawyers, lobbyists, and accountants they can afford.

Page 16: Principles of Good Tax Policy Panama City, Panama, January 27, 2005

OpportunityA simple, low-rate, neutral tax system removes barriers to upward mobility.The goal is to have a system that creates more rich people.People should be able to rise as far and as fast as their talents, abilities, and willingness to work hard will take them.A productive, self-reliant people is a critical form of social capital for a productive society.

Page 17: Principles of Good Tax Policy Panama City, Panama, January 27, 2005

CompetitivenessToday’s global economy makes good tax policy much more important.Lower tax burdens is one reason why the U.S. is doing much better than the E.U., with faster growth and more employment. Tax reform is particularly important for transition and developing economies since good tax policy will entice both direct and indirect foreign investment.

Page 18: Principles of Good Tax Policy Panama City, Panama, January 27, 2005

Competitiveness…continued

Tax competition is a powerful force for economic liberalization, one that should be celebrated rather than persecuted.The rewards for good tax policy have never been greater.Central and Eastern Europe are changing history with pro-growth tax reforms.Don’t let the OECD and EU undermine reform.

Page 19: Principles of Good Tax Policy Panama City, Panama, January 27, 2005

More competitivenessOECD economists have written that “the ability to choose the location of economic activity offsets shortcomings in government budgeting processes, limiting a tendency to spend and tax excessively.”Gary Becker observed that “…competition among nations tends to produce a race to the top rather than to the bottom by limiting the ability of powerful and voracious groups and politicians in each nation to impose their will at the expense of the interests of the vast majority of their populations.”

Page 20: Principles of Good Tax Policy Panama City, Panama, January 27, 2005

PrivacyTax reform – specifically the proper definition of taxable income – dramatically enhances the right to privacy.If capital income is taxed at the business level, nobody has to tell the government about their savings, investments, or assets. In a free society, people should not have to tell the government about their private affairs without a compelling interest.

Page 21: Principles of Good Tax Policy Panama City, Panama, January 27, 2005

EnforcementFlat tax systems are easy to enforce.OECD economists note that “legal tax avoidance can be reduced by closing loopholes and illegal tax evasion can be contained by better enforcement of tax codes. But the root of the problem appears in many cases to be high tax rates.”Taxing capital only once – especially at the source – is especially conducive to enforcement.

Page 22: Principles of Good Tax Policy Panama City, Panama, January 27, 2005

Evidence Supports Good Policy

EstoniaIrelandRussiaSlovakiaUnited StatesHong Kong

Page 23: Principles of Good Tax Policy Panama City, Panama, January 27, 2005

EstoniaEstonia was the first post-Soviet nation to implement tax reform, adopting a 26 percent flat tax in 1994.Other Baltic nations quickly followed.The tax rate has since been lowered to 24 percent because of tax competition, and will drop to 20 percent by 2007.Estonia is an economic success story and now has the world’s 4th freest economy according to the Index of Economic Freedom.

Page 24: Principles of Good Tax Policy Panama City, Panama, January 27, 2005

IrelandOnce the “sick man of Europe,” Ireland became the “Celtic Tiger” by slashing tax rates and dramatically lowering size of government.Dropping the corporate tax rate from 50 percent to 12.5 percent has helped Ireland become the 2nd richest nation in EU.Unemployment has dropped from 15 percent to 5 percent. Ireland is ranked 5th in Index.

Page 25: Principles of Good Tax Policy Panama City, Panama, January 27, 2005

RussiaRussia implemented a 13 percent flat tax in January 2001.The Russian economy has enjoyed rapid growth.Personal income tax revenues have increased by more than 100 percent – after adjusting for inflation.Russian flat tax has encouraged similar reforms in other post-Soviet nations, including Serbia, Ukraine, Georgia, and Romania.

Page 26: Principles of Good Tax Policy Panama City, Panama, January 27, 2005

SlovakiaSlovakia implemented a very pure flat tax in 2004.New investment has been pouring into Slovakia.So many auto factories are being located in Slovakia that it is being called the “Detroit of Europe.”There is only one year of evidence, but revenues have grown much faster than projected.

Page 27: Principles of Good Tax Policy Panama City, Panama, January 27, 2005

United StatesThe U.S. has a much lower tax burden than Europe, 28 percent of GDP compared to 42 percent of GDP in Europe – and therefore a much stronger economy.Per capita economic output in the US in 2003 was $37,600, more than 40% higher than the EU-15 average. Real economic growth in the U.S. over the last 10 years has been more than 50 percent faster than EU-15 growth in the same period.

Page 28: Principles of Good Tax Policy Panama City, Panama, January 27, 2005

More U.S. vs. E.U.The unemployment rate in the U.S. is significantly lower than the EU-15 unemployment rate and job creation in the U.S. is much higher.Living standards in the EU are equivalent to the very poorest American states, roughly equal to places such as Arkansas and Montana and only slightly ahead of the two poorest states, West Virginia, and Mississippi.

Page 29: Principles of Good Tax Policy Panama City, Panama, January 27, 2005

Hong KongUnlike post-Soviet nations, Hong Kong has had a flat tax for a long time.Hong Kong has been the world’s fastest-growing economy since end of World War II.The tax system generates substantial revenue, particularly from the rich.Hong Kong is the world’s freest economy according to Index of Economic Freedom.

Page 30: Principles of Good Tax Policy Panama City, Panama, January 27, 2005

Key Obstacles to Tax Reform

Class WarfareRevenue DemandsSpecial InterestsPolitical Power

Page 31: Principles of Good Tax Policy Panama City, Panama, January 27, 2005

Class Warfare Hurts the PoorOpponents of tax reform also argue that high tax burdens on saving, investment, and assets prevent an “unfair” concentration of wealth.No evidence for this hypothesis.These policies diminish economic growth and capital formation, and this primarily hurts lower-income people.Opponents fail to realize that the goal is upward mobility and economic expansion, not simply new ways to divide an existing pie.

Page 32: Principles of Good Tax Policy Panama City, Panama, January 27, 2005

Growth, Not RedistributionCompassion is not defined by seizing and spending someone else’s money.It is far more compassionate to create a society that gives people the opportunity to get a good job that pays a good wage.In the U.S., there is dramatic income mobility as many rich people lose wealth and many poor people climb out of poverty.Winston Churchill defined socialism as the equal sharing of the misery.

Page 33: Principles of Good Tax Policy Panama City, Panama, January 27, 2005

The “Supply-Side” EffectA low-rate flat tax does not necessarily mean lower revenue, particularly in the long run.When people work more, save more, invest more, the tax base is bigger and government gets more money.When people have less incentive to hide, shelter, and under-report, the government gets more money.Evidence from around the world is strong.

Page 34: Principles of Good Tax Policy Panama City, Panama, January 27, 2005

Overcoming Special InterestsMany groups benefit from special loopholes and preferences.Transition and developing economies have an advantage – these special provisions are not firmly embedded in tax systems.But special interests will still resist tax reform, which is why a bold system is needed to capture the public’s imagination.

Page 35: Principles of Good Tax Policy Panama City, Panama, January 27, 2005

Controlling political corruptionSimple and fair flat taxes reduce the power of government and this means politicians have less ability to exchange special tax provisions for campaign cash and other forms of political support.This is the biggest obstacle to tax reform in America.But it is one of the best reasons to adopt the flat tax.

Page 36: Principles of Good Tax Policy Panama City, Panama, January 27, 2005

ConclusionTax reform and supply-side tax policy is good politics and good economics.It reduces distortions and minimizes corruption.Good tax policy will give growth a major boost – assuming anti-tax competition schemes don’t hinder the flow of jobs and capital from high-tax nations to low-tax nations.Put people first, not government.

Page 37: Principles of Good Tax Policy Panama City, Panama, January 27, 2005

For More Information:

www.heritage.orgwww.freedomandprosperity.orgwww.heritage.org/taxcompetition