Author Topic: interesting reading  (Read 114 times)

Offline Krusher

  • Gold Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 2246
interesting reading
« on: November 28, 2005, 12:39:59 PM »
If your bored, house bound in a blizzard or on vacation and too lazy too have fun (like me LOL), check this site out. It has some very interesting economic information that might surprise or at least make you think.


Link

(for Silat)
However, tax cuts mainly profit the rich is it not?  

This is exactly the misunderstanding of the ideologists of envy in many countries!  Under a production stimulating policy, everyone is better off, and certainly not in the least the worker, unemployed or disadvantaged.  Look at job creation and social expenditures. Since 1985 Ireland crated 31,2% new jobs. In Belgium with its so called social policies and its innumerable expensive employment measures they barely created 7,6%, and for a large part in government employments.


Does a rate cut not lead to a cutback of the social spending?  

A first misunderstanding is to suppose that rate cuts lead to lower tax receipts.  Nothing is less true.  Here the Laffer-effect comes into play.  Every rate cut broadens the tax base because tax evasion and fraud becomes less profitable. The Flamisch government had already a small taste of the benefits of this Laffer-effect. Since they lowered inheritance rates, their tax receipts from inheritances have dramatically risen.

Morover one should remark that lowering inheritance rates does not motivate to die early.  If governments cut rates on incomes however, they may expect the supplementary benefits of the so-called Armey-effects. Low rates on income motivate people to go back to work, to perform some overtime, to start their own business, or to delay retirement. This broadens the tax base still further. Moreover, the financial resources that flow back to the private sector are invested much more productively there than in the public sector.