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Politics : President Barack Obama -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Road Walker who wrote (133099)4/16/2013 6:45:28 AM
From: Road Walker  Respond to of 149317
 
If Companies Are People...

By JAMES LIVINGSTON

HERE’S an idea: why not tax corporations as if they were natural persons, in accordance with their newly discovered rights of free speech? That move would solve any impending fiscal crisis.

Indeed, we used to do just that. For most of the 1950s, corporate income at large companies was taxed at 52 percent, according to the nonpartisan Tax Policy Center. The federal government, meanwhile, collected about a third of its revenues from this source. Today, thanks largely to the “reforms” ushered in by President Ronald Reagan, the ostensible tax rate on corporate income is no higher than 35 percent — and the corporate-tax share of federal revenue has fallen to about 9 percent.

For a view as to how this happened, consider General Electric. Back in the 1950s and early ’60s, when Reagan was a company pitchman, G.E. was a manufacturer of consumer appliances. It employed hundreds of thousands of people, and it paid millions of dollars in taxes every year. Now, it makes jet engines, wind turbines and other kinds of capital equipment, but its real profit center is financing the sale of these products overseas — because income generated here is tax exempt if it remains offshore.

In 2010 G.E. employed more than 130,000 people in the United States, and earned $14.2 billion, $5.1 billion of which was generated in the United States. And yet its American tax bill for that year, according to a report by The New York Times, was zero. (G.E. said in a news release last year that its “global tax rate” in 2010 was 7 percent, but did not disclose how much of that went to the I.R.S.)

Meanwhile, federal spending steadily increased, in line with the growth of the welfare state. As corporations lobbied and learned to avoid taxes, the government began to close the revenue gap with payroll taxes. These were negligible before the creation of Medicare in 1965, but they now account for more than a third of federal revenue — in effect, they replaced the income taxes once paid by corporations.

Personal income taxes (which have stayed at about 45 percent of federal revenues since 1950) and payroll taxes now provide the federal government with almost 80 percent of its yearly revenue.

Unlike personal income taxes, Medicare and Social Security taxes — which are jointly known as FICA (for Federal Insurance Contributions Act), or payroll taxes — are plainly regressive. Because of the payroll cap on Social Security contributions, the bottom quintile of income recipients pays a 7.3 percent FICA rate, while the top quintile pays a 6.8 percent rate and the top 1 percent of earners pay a rate of just 0.9 percent.

So, by slashing corporate income taxes and forcing a new reliance on payroll taxes to finance government spending, we have redistributed income to the already wealthy and powerful. Our tax system has actually fostered inequality.

The fiscal problem we face is not, then, a lack of revenue sources. We can finance any amount of transfer payments and “entitlements” by taxing corporations’ profits in the same way we tax personal income, using a progressive formula. If necessary, give them a mortgage deduction — they already get something like it in the form of accelerated depreciation allowances on their purchases of capital equipment — but make them pay higher taxes on their income. Do that, and the federal deficit goes away.

The now-familiar objection to a tax increase on corporate profits is that it will discourage private investment and thus dampen job creation. The retort is just as obvious: since when have tax cuts on corporate profits led to increased investment, faster job creation and higher per capita consumption out of rising real wages? It didn’t happen after the Reagan Revolution, it didn’t happen during the Clinton boom of the 1990s, and it sure didn’t happen under George W. Bush.

Nor is it happening now, as corporate profits soar and full-time job creation languishes. American corporations are now sitting on $4.75 trillion in cash, according to the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis.

The other well-worn objection to an increase of corporate income taxes is that it would encourage companies to invest and hire overseas, where tax rates are presumably lower. Here, too, the retort is obvious: the tax code already works exactly this way by postponing taxes until profits from investment overseas are repatriated. American companies routinely avoid taxation by moving their idle cash offshore.

In view of these facts, there’s no downside to replacing payroll taxes with increased taxes on corporate profits, wherever they’re made or held. By doing so, we make the tax code more progressive, and mobilize capital that is otherwise inert. In other words, we can lay solid foundations for economic growth simply by going back to the tax principles we used to have. What could be more conservative than that?



To: Road Walker who wrote (133099)4/16/2013 8:47:21 AM
From: Alex MG2 Recommendations  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 149317
 



To: Road Walker who wrote (133099)4/17/2013 7:30:20 AM
From: RetiredNow  Respond to of 149317
 
Bingo. Good article. Here's another good idea who's time has come. Means test the Entitlements and Welfare.

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The Right Way to Cut Entitlements

By GENE EPSTEIN | MORE ARTICLES BY AUTHOR

Means-testing is the ticket, not reliance on a different version of the consumer price index, as the Obama-Boehner plan suggests.

online.barrons.com

Alone among the economic measures, the consumer-price index serves as both thermometer and thermostat: What it says about the cost of living helps regulate what things cost, including the $821 billion worth of Social Security checks due to go out this year to 58 million Americans.

Each Social Security check is adjusted annually by a version of the CPI dubbed CPI-W, where W stands for wage-earner. Unlike the version of the index that is normally headlined each month -- CPI-U, where U stands for urban -- the W version is keyed off the spending habits of wage earners, who naturally allocate a greater share of their income to food and energy than the urban index reflects. As a result, the CPI-W has risen a bit faster than CPI-U, thereby putting a few extra dollars in those Social Security checks.

Last week, however, President Barack Obama came out for reversing all that. Picking up on an idea that apparently originated with Republican House Speaker John Boehner, the president proposed scrapping the CPI-W as the inflation-boosting index of choice and replacing it with another variant, the "chained consumer-price index."

The motivation for the switch is clear. The chained CPI has risen more slowly than either CPI-U or W and, given its basic design, should continue to do so in years to come. The Obama-Boehner reform would therefore save money -- all other things being equal, a worthy goal. But there are other, more radical reforms that are at once more fair-minded and more parsimonious with taxpayer dollars that should be put on the table before Obama-Boehner is accepted.

To begin with, all price indexes are mere gross approximations that apply to flesh-and-blood folks quite imperfectly -- a point unintentionally highlighted by the example given by the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the keeper of these measures, to explain how the chained CPI works.

The other CPIs, explains the BLS, feel the full effect of either a rise in the price of beef or in the price of pork. The chained CPI, in contrast, doesn't rise as fast, because it's designed to reflect the fact that consumers will respond by shifting from pork to beef and back again. True, but not if they keep kosher.

Since Social Security is targeted to the elderly, why not a CPI based on their expenditure patterns? It turns out that the BLS has been tracking just such an index called, not surprisingly, CPI-E. It, too, is imperfect (also includes pork), but it's better targeted to the population that Social Security is supposed to serve. Its main drawback: Partly because it features a much larger weight for medical care, it has been rising faster than the chained CPI.

BUT DOES THIS MEAN there is no way to put a brake on the cost of entitlement programs? Not if we reform all of them to serve only those people clearly in need. The idea is called means-testing or, as radical reformer Peter Peterson has called it, affluence-testing.

The government can no longer afford to subsidize the affluent, assuming that it ever should have. Peterson proposed imposing affluence-testing on all government benefits, whatever the age of the recipient, including Social Security, Medicare, military and civil-service pensions, housing subsidies, unemployment compensation, and subsidies to rich farmers.

As a cost-saving measure, it's an idea whose time came long ago.