As the UK prepares to impose the sharpest tax rate increase in 30 plus years, Switzerland looms — and David Cameron already seems a loser.
The pundits say that supply-side economics is dead. If they mean it is unfashionable, I agree. If they mean that supply-side reductions in tax rates will not help ailing economies, or that increases will not hurt them, I disagree. Anyway, the argument is about to meet a real-world test in Britain.
It has long been argued by supply-siders that reductions in marginal tax rates will bring in more revenue, not less. More jobs will be created and the economy will flourish, everything else being equal.
Many analysts do not accept this argument, partly because of our careless use of language. We talk of “tax cuts,” a phrase that conflates tax rates and revenues — prices and quantities. Such language builds into our thinking the assumption that tax revenues rise or fall in proportion to rates. It ain’t so.
Think of it this way. You run a fast food place and you sell hamburgers for $10. But not enough money is coming into the till. So you raise the hamburger price to $11. Do you really expect sales to increase ten percent? Think again. How about reducing the price to $7.50? Does you revenue then go down, or up?
Think of tax rates and tax revenues in the same way.
In the U.S., the most important applications of the supply-side idea arose with the Kemp-Roth capital gains tax rate reduction in 1978, and then with President Regan’s reduction in the top income tax rate (from 70 to 40 percent) in 1981. These changes launched an economic boom that lasted for 25 years. They also brought in tax revenues that were vastly higher than predicted.
Journalists almost always talk of “tax cuts” or “tax increases” when reductions or increases in tax rates is what they should be saying. Their excuse is that “tax cut” is more convenient and uses half the space. But in this case brevity is the soul of confusion. Also, of course, most journalists are liberals and want to believe that if the government raises tax rates, we have no choice but to fork over more money. Taxes are compulsory.
Here are the changes that Alistair Darling, the British Chancellor of the Exchequer, promises for next year. In April, the top income tax rate will be increased to 50 percent, from the current 40 percent, and will apply to taxable income above 150,000 pounds. This is the sharpest increase in tax rates seen in Britain for over 30 years.
That is the first piece of bad news for Britain, but here is something equally bad. The country must hold a general election no later than June. Almost certainly it will be in May, 2010. The leader of the Conservative Party, David Cameron, is ahead in the polls, but his support has fallen, and a hung Parliament now looms as a possibility.
What does Cameron say about the approaching tax-rate increase? If elected, he says, he will not — at least in the beginning — do anything about it. He merely holds out the hope that he will be able to reduce the top rate before the end of his first term.
I heard this last month from my brother, who is involved in Conservative politics at the local level in Britain. He even got himself elected as a councilman. Anyway, my immediate reaction to that news was that Cameron deserves to lose the election, simply on the tax issue alone.
In several other ways, Cameron has attempted to minimize his differences with Labour, as though he believed that the problem for conservatives is that they are not politically correct enough. He soon signed on to the global warming scare, for example. As a conservative, Cameron is to Margaret Thatcher what Bob Dole was to Ronald Reagan.
Here are some more tax increases that are due to go into effect in England. Fuel tax will be increased by 3.5 percent in April. (A gallon of gas already costs $7 to $8 in Britain — mostly taxes.) And the value added tax, reduced this time last year to 15 percent to alleviate the financial crisis, will soon be moved back up again to 17.5 percent. The Labour Government is also drawing up plans for a windfall tax on the bonuses recently paid to bankers. And a planned increase in the threshold level at which inheritance taxes take effect has been scrapped.
Here is a one-word reason why these assaults on the rich are a bad idea: Switzerland. The rich whom the government is taking aim at are also the best placed to avoid the poison that is being prepared for them. They can leave the country and claim non-domiciled status for tax purposes. Switzerland is the destination that has been in the news.
A high-end real estate agent in London has recently been holding Swiss-relocation seminars and some of the city’s wealthiest people have been briefed on the advantages of heading off for Geneva or Zurich.
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Vaemar-Riit| 12.8.09 @ 6:53AM
I am very critical of Cameron. But another British Labour Government would be a disaster beyond imagining. The key text to read for survival then would be Dennis Wheatley's 1935 "Black August," and the best advice I could give my British friends would be to find a nice secluded and self-sufficient hilltop farm and fortify it.
Ken (Old Texican)| 12.8.09 @ 7:01PM
Vaemar-Ritt,
I'm with you guy! Please check out the oh so erudite comments below.
(Idiots)
Why in hell haven't you caught an airplane yet?
We Americans are going to have such a jolly civil war...(sadly probably with bullets), very soon.
"We got a lot of horse-thieves need killin' but we gotta' kill 'em proper." (Judge Roy Bean).
Seriously, sir. Where do you hail from?
Thank you for dropping in.
Derek Leaberry| 12.8.09 @ 8:13AM
Cameron has instigated his own decline in the polls by his mealymouth statements regarding the European Union, Britain's role in that dictatorship, and whether Britons will be given a referendum on whether to join the EU gang of bureaucratic thugs. Labour and the Liberal-Democrats are both evil institutions to be sure but the Cameron Tories are cowardly.
melvin| 12.8.09 @ 10:44AM
Do you think that if the current trend continues of the EU's leadership being the EU that they're heavy handed approach could eventually lead to a European Civil War?
Reason being, that the EU tends to crap all over the smaller member states.
This is something that I have been visualizing in the horrendous way the EU's leadership dictates, "
Our way or the highway," mentality.
Derek Leaberry| 12.8.09 @ 11:16AM
I don't see a civil war between Europeans but a simmering one between Muslims and Europeans that is restricted to the sort of rioting we've seen in the last decade or so. As Europe has to downgrade their welfare states and necessarilly cut back the subsidization of the indolent Muslims, the rioting should intensify.
As for the response of European citizens to EU overreach, I see a patient public that only rejects the European Union when that institution loses all credibility, especially when the welfare state implodes sometime in the 2030s.
Christopher Holland| 12.8.09 @ 8:15PM
Imagine what the country will be like if the global warming scaremongers get away with their 'green' taxes and regulatory nightmares. Third world poverty looks like it is coming to Little Britain, ready or not.
Yosemeti Sam| 12.8.09 @ 11:01PM
" ... In several other ways, Cameron has attempted to minimize his differences with Labour, as though he believed that the problem for conservatives is that they are not politically correct enough ...."
Hah!
A UK RINO uncovered - just in the tick of time ?
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