Friday, July 4, 2008, 5:21PM ET - U.S. Markets Closed for Independence Day.
Tax Day is approaching. So maybe you're reading this as you prepare to write Uncle Sam a big check. Or maybe you don't pay taxes, and you've convinced the warden at your minimum security federal prison to give you Internet privileges. In either case, if you're looking to me to provide some intellectual rationale for why your tax bill should be lower ... I can't.
It's certainly true that lower taxes can inspire lots of good things. Economics is all about incentives, and lower tax rates generally create positive incentives. Lower payroll taxes make it cheaper for employers to take on new workers. Lower taxes on capital gains make investment more attractive.
Lower marginal rates on income tax encourage greater participation in the labor force -- particularly in families with two potential earners. That second job looks a lot more attractive when you get to keep 70 or 80 percent of the salary, rather than half or less.
So, yes, there are lots of good things about low taxes, as politicians like to remind us. But that doesn't mean that the road to growth and prosperity must be paved with tax cuts.
Incentives That Benefit Society
Alas, there's an inconvenient counterpoint. We use tax revenues to pay for things that also protect and promote growth and prosperity -- handy things like highways, education, stoplights, mosquito abatement, counterterrorism, civil and criminal courts, a stable currency, and all those Americans currently trying to bring order to Iraq.
The notion that lower taxes must always be better for the economy becomes an obvious fallacy when carried to its logical conclusion: The economy would grow fastest with no taxes at all. Of course, that doesn't make any sense. A nation with zero taxes would look something like Haiti, or Baghdad just after the U.S. invasion. It wouldn't necessarily be a great place to do business or raise a family.
So, the economic reality is more nuanced. Some taxes, particularly those that create the worst distortions, should be lowered or scrapped entirely. Others should actually be much higher, for reasons that I'll explain in a moment.
The important thing to recognize is that different taxes create different incentives. An income tax makes working less attractive, a cigarette tax makes smoking less attractive. Which incentive is better for society?
Who Says It's Wasteful Spending That Gets Cut?
The same is true on the spending side. Some government spending is a prodigious waste of money (e.g. enormous farm subsidies), while other programs have paid for themselves many times over (e.g. the Interstate Highway System).
Yes, a smaller government leaves less room for waste, but who says it's the wasteful spending that gets cut? Farm subsidies are shockingly resilient, no matter which party controls the White House and Congress. And "smaller government" could leave out some pretty crucial things. Wouldn't it have been nice to have a few more Arabic speakers in the CIA and FBI before 9/11?
Economics offers few sweeping generalizations about whether you should pay more or less to the government every year. But I'm not done with this column. Economists do spend a lot of time arguing that whatever revenue is collected ought to come from different sources. All taxes are not created equal. We could make ourselves better off by raising some taxes and lowering others.
In that spirit, here's my Tax Day wish list:
Protecting Their Loopholes
So why aren't we doing these things? Well, let's think about the politics. So far, by my rough tally, I've offended the farm lobby (who are rather attached to those huge agriculture subsidies), the entire real estate industry (who recognize that the mortgage-interest deduction helps prop up demand), and the oil, gas, coal, and auto industries (none of whom are excited about a carbon tax).
That should give you some sense of why the tax code looks the way it does. Happy Tax Day.

















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