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The Dire Wolf’s Collectivist Dues

24 Saturday Jan 2015

Posted by Nuetzel in Taxes

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529 Plans, Capital Gains Tax, Collectivism, Dire Wolf, Glenn Reynolds, Inequality, Market Inequality, Megan McArdle, Obama Tax Plan, Redistribution, Robert Higgs, Sheldon Richman, State of the Union, Statist Inequality

wolf mask

Inequality does not imply poverty for anyone, and inequality is a reasonable outcome of voluntary economic interactions between individuals who vary in their ability to create value. But inequality arising from artificial advantages conferred by the force of government and cronyism is indefensible. Sheldon Richman draws this useful distinction between the market’s distribution of rewards, which is a consequence of an unequal distribution of value-creating energy, ingenuity and talent, as opposed to the unequal rewards of a system of centralized control in which subsidies flow to cronies, monopolists are protected, barriers to activity are erected and political elites enjoy the fruits of value-destroying privilege. Here’s a sample from Richman’s post:

“Unlike market inequality, political-economic inequality is unjust and should be eliminated. … How? By abolishing all direct and indirect subsidies; artificial scarcities, such as those created by so-called intellectual property; regulations, which inevitably burden smaller and yet-to-be-launched firms more than lawyered-up big businesses; eminent domain; and permit requirements, zoning, and occupational licensing, which all exclude competition. …

Instead of symbolically tweaking the tax code to appear to be addressing inequality—the politicians’ charade—political-economic inequality should be ended by repealing all privileges right now.”

And yet we get fatuous rants from Obama about the ravages of market inequality and more tweaking of the tax code. Tweaking is too kind a word. The State of the Union address last week was a collectivist’s wet dream, replete with visions of central planning and a long list of non-neutral incentives and favors for the president’s base. He did his best to stoke the flames of class division and envy. One must ask: how long can the surviving market economy and a shrinking share of actual taxpayers support the growing dependent class and the nonproductive state apparatus?

In “Uncle Sam Is Coming After Your Savings?“, Megan McArdle warns of the dire wolf waiting at the door of every hopeful saver and middle class taxpayer. She cites Obama’s proposed tax on college savings plans (529s) as one piece of evidence, and asks “How would you feel if they did this to Roth IRAs”?

“… the very fact that we are discussing taxation of educational savings — redistributing educational subsidies downward — indicates that the administration has started scraping the bottom of the barrel when seeking out money to fund new programs. Why target a tax benefit that goes to a lot of your supporters (and donors), that tickles one of the sweetest spots in American politics (subsidizing higher education), and that will hit a lot of people who make less than the $250,000 a year that has become the administration’s de facto definition of ‘rich’?”

Then there’s the proposed elimination of the stepped-up tax basis at death, covered a few days ago at this blog, and the increase in the tax rate on capital gains and already double-taxed dividends from 24% to 28%. Of this, and the more general issue of investment incentives and efficient revenue generation, McArdle says:

“… we don’t try to tax the bejesus out of capital income, much as many would like to; old capital flees, and new capital doesn’t get formed, as savers decide it’s not worth it.”

No we don’t, for now, but that lack of capital formation is a dire implication of heavier taxes for the economy. It is an achilles heal of the redistributionist policy agenda, as a lack of new capital undermines productivity, income growth and opportunity across the board. Middle-class economics? Please, no. Glenn Reynolds has some additional thoughts on McArdle’s column:

“The truth is, in our redistributionist system politicians make their careers mostly by taking money from one group of citizens that won’t vote for them and giving it to another that will. If they run short of money from traditional sources, they’ll look for new revenue wherever they can find it. And if that’s the homes and savings of the middle class, then that’s what they’ll target.

For the moment, Americans are safe. With both houses of Congress controlled by the GOP, Obama’s proposals are DOA. But over the long term, the appetite for government spending is effectively endless, while the sources of revenue are limited. Keep that in mind as you think about where to invest your money … and your votes.”

Statistics on inequality are brandished by progressives as if to prove the existence of a great market malfunction, but as Richman points out at the link given above, an extreme form of inequality is an inevitable outcome of privilege conferred by the state. On the other hand, market inequality is no tragedy for humankind. It is an artifact of the most peaceful, productive system of social coordination ever devised. Market inequality is not related in any way to the absolute welfare of the median earning family or the least fortunate, as Robert Higgs explains in this interesting essay:

“Probably no subject in the social sciences has created so much unnecessary heat. Yet, at the same time, economists actually know a great deal about it and can dispel the public’s confusion about it if they try.” [Emphasis added]

Punitive Taxes Chase Off a Rational King

28 Thursday Aug 2014

Posted by Nuetzel in Uncategorized

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Burger King, consumption tax, corporate desertion, corporate income tax, economic patriotism, Greg Mankiw, Learned Hand, Megan McArdle, tax inversions

burger-king-fireplace 

The counterproductive U.S. corporate tax code was a major incentive for Burger King’s prospective merger with the Canadian doughnut chain Tim Hortons. The merger will allow BK to change its domicile to Canada, thereby reducing its tax bill. This is known as a corporate “tax inversion.” Canada’s tax system is less punishing because its corporate tax rate is lower than in the U.S., and Canadian taxes are based on territorial earnings, rather than global earnings as in the U.S. Megan McArdle explains that the latter is the more important consideration: “If we’re worried about inversion, then the U.S. government should follow the lead of other developed countries, and move to territorial taxation.”

The corporate income tax represents double taxation of income paid out as dividends and imposes, at least partly, a double tax burden on shareholders even when earnings are retained. Greg Mankiw believes that the corporate income tax should be abolished.

“The burden of the corporate tax is ultimately borne by people — some combination of the companies’ employees, customers and shareholders. After recognizing that corporations are mere conduits, we can focus more directly on the people.”

On the topic of “economic patriotism” and so-called “corporate desertion,” Mankiw quotes Learned Hand:

“Anyone may arrange his affairs so that his taxes shall be as low as possible; he is not bound to choose that pattern which best pays the treasury. There is not even a patriotic duty to increase one’s taxes.”

Mankiw also proposes a consumption tax as a replacement for federal income taxation, which has great merit, but it is a very ambitious plan and probably at odds with current political realities.

No Country For Executive Fiat

08 Friday Aug 2014

Posted by Nuetzel in Uncategorized

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Deferred Action, Executive Orders, Immigration reform, Megan McArdle, Obama, Prosecutorial Discretion, Ron Fournier

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President Obama says he wants to allow the Immigration and Customs Enforcement Agency (ICE) to exercise “prosecutorial discretion” in deportation efforts, focusing on individuals convicted of serious crimes instead of immigration violators. He might also expand “deferred action,” by which  legal status and work permits are issued temporarily to certain younger adults and to children arriving illegally. Obama would accomplish this via executive order of questionable legality. An advocate of liberalized immigration, Megan McArdle offers a strong critique of this “trial balloon”:

Whatever your opinion on immigration policy, I hope it doesn’t involve supporting giving the president extremely broad powers to simply rewrite any law that he thinks ought to be different. To see why, you need only ask yourself a simple question: Would you like to give this power to a president from the opposing party on a law where the two of you disagree?

Obama gives lip service to the separation of powers, but he blames the current Congress and the GOP for the current impasse. Ron Fournier is strongly sympathetic to that point of view, but he also lays plenty of blame at Obama’s feet:

Obama’s party is partly responsible for this mess, because of the cynical choices made during his first two years in office to punt on reform, in part because the Democrats who ran Congress wanted to be able to portray the GOP as anti-minority in the 2010 elections.

Obama denies culpability, but the record is clear, and almost any Democrat in Washington will concede, privately, that the president broke his promise to make immigration reform a top priority in 2009-10.

Many arguments can be made against full amnesty for illegal immigrants, most of which I find objectionable, but under the constitution, existing laws must be enforced “faithfully” by the president. Immigration reform is extremely important, but it must be thrashed out through the legislative process.

More Obamacare Follies

31 Thursday Jul 2014

Posted by Nuetzel in Uncategorized

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ACA, adverse selection, crony capitalism, Don Boudreaux, Medicare, Megan McArdle, Obamacare, rent seeking

follies
Disconcerting news regarding the administration of the ACA just keeps on coming. The so-called “risk corridors” represent a bailout for health insurers for whom Obamacare premium revenue proves inadequate. Sure enough, but more interesting is how the Obama administration attempted to manipulate several provisions of the law on reimbursement in order to keep insurers happy after other changes with negative implications for their risk pools. In addition, when insurers expressed alarm about the “budget neutrality” of the corridors, the administration backtracked on that position. “… the administration had a choice: provide a bailout, or face the unpleasant prospect of having insurers price their products honestly.” The unfolding of these events is detailed in Emails Show Cozy Government- Insurer Alliance….

Don’t get too excited about the improvement in Medicare’s finances under the ACA. The chief actuary for the Centers for Medicaid and Medicare Services says that the ACA’s Medicare changes aren’t sustainable. Reimbursement rates under the ACA are inadequate barring “an unprecedented change in health care delivery systems and payment mechanisms.” In other words, an unlikely advance in productivity will be necessary in order to make Medicare’s finances work.

A few days ago, I posted about the Halbig vs. Sebelius District Court decision here, highlighting Jonathan Gruber’s one-time defense of the ACA’s rules that premium subsidies could be paid only on policies purchased on state exchanges. More recently, he claimed that the rule was not the intent of the legislation. Here are some further thoughts from Don Boudreaux on Gruber’s memory lapse, in which he links to a piece by Megan McArdle. Boudreaux:

The very claim that such a simple “mistake” infects the ACA calls into question the competence (or the incentives, or both) of elites, both political and intellectual, who seek ever more power for government.

Questioning Student Loan Subsidies

12 Thursday Jun 2014

Posted by Nuetzel in Uncategorized

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Elizabeth Warren, Megan McArdle, Obama, Student Loans, Subsidies

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Obama and other statists are proposing extra subsidies to student loan borrowers. As Megan McArdle points out, the proposed breaks are questionable public policy at best: “It’s good to remember, as we discuss these plans, that people with college degrees are the best-off people in the U.S. They are a cognitive elite with substantially more earning power than almost anyone else….” These borrowers are highly visible, of course, so political opportunists like Obama and Elizabeth Warren can’t resist such proposals. 

Can The VA Bureaucracy Be Reformed?

01 Sunday Jun 2014

Posted by Nuetzel in Uncategorized

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Bureaucracy, Megan McArdle, Restructuring, Veteran's Affairs, Yuval Levin

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Yuval Levin assesses the VA in the aftermath of the waiting list scandal, damning the fraud but also giving credit for good performance where credit is due. He debunks some recent defensive claims and apologia, especially concerning comparisons of the VA to the private health care system. Levin concludes that powerful political interests are likely to prevent any big structural changes at the VA. Bad news!

Megan McArdle thinks that fixing the VA bureaucracy is impossible short of a major upheaval, citing the kinds of experiences that have led to successful and unsuccessful corporate restructurings. “Over time, institutions develop a strong culture, a set of institutional practices, customs and norms that control what the organization is capable of doing. To see what I mean, imagine the staff of the New York Times producing Gawker — or the staff of Gawker Media producing the New York Times.” Only sweeping changes, which are often cruel to the old guard, can lead to a successful transition. This is unlikely at the VA.

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