Showing posts with label taxation basics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label taxation basics. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 08, 2012

Video: Corporate Taxes Hurt the People

Professsor Steve Horwitz in the following video explains how corporate taxes hurt the people, and not the rich. (Thanks to Michael Moroney of LearnLiberty.org and George Mason University for sending this)

Here is the prologue from LearnLiberty.org
Corporations are not monoliths -- they are made up of individuals, including workers and non-wealthy shareholders. So are corporations distinct from the people that comprise them? When corporations are taxed, who pays the tax? Economics professor Steven Horwitz shows why a tax on corporations is not the equivalent of a tax on the wealthy. Instead, workers and consumers will pay these taxes. A tax on a corporation is also a tax on the workers who work at the corporation, the consumers who buy from the corporation, and the shareholders who own the corporation as part of their retirement fund.

Friday, July 23, 2010

Taxes 101: The Laffer Curve

Here is a nifty three part video series by Daniel Mitchell of the CATO Institute on how taxes influence people's behaviour, and consequently, the ramifications to the economy.

Part I: Understanding the Theory



Part 2: Reviewing the Evidence


Part 3: Policy Analysis Via Dynamic Scoring



What we'd like to show is that government spending always impact tax policies but to a diverse degree. These ultimately affects people's behavior which subsequently will be manifested on the performance of an economy and the state of capital (wealth) accumulation/consumption.

It's also very important to point out that taxes has been a highly sensitive political issue such that in certain periods of history, public uproar against taxes catalyzed revolutions.

Example, this article from Murray N. Rothbard,

"Seventeenth-century French kings and their minions did not impose an accelerating burden of absolutism without provoking grave, deep, and continuing opposition. Indeed, there were repeated rebellions by groups of peasants and nobles in France from the 1630s to the 1670s. Generally, the focus of discontent and uprising was rising taxes, as well as the losses of rights and privileges. There were also similar rebellions in Spain in mid-century, and in autocratic Russia throughout the seventeenth century."

Bottom line: Be wary and leery of politicos advocating for more government expenditures because these eventually translate to higher taxes, which translates to a lower standard of living.