Get Ready for a 60 Percent Top Tax Rate
Thursday, November 12, 2009 10:11 AM
By: Gene J. Koprowski Article Font Size
Economists who have the Obama administration's policymaking ear simply do not believe that higher marginal tax rates will retard economic growth, writes economist Irwin Stelzer.
Writing in the The Weekly Standard, Stelzer explains that the administration is “flirting with such things as a 60 percent rate on the incremental income” of high earners.
This tax increase will be rationalized, and described in euphemistic language.
“In the case of Congressmen searching desperately for a way to fund the president's $1 trillion health care plan, a ‘millionaire's tax’ on the order of a 5 percent surcharge on the taxes of anyone earning that sum,” writes Stelzer.
“This is in part a reaction to extreme supply-siders who persuaded Republican politicians that any and all tax cuts actually produce more revenue.”
Stelzer said that liberal economists today do not believe monetary incentives drive risk-taking and hard work.
“Therefore, appropriating a larger portion of national income for the state will not affect the growth rate,” they conclude, writes Stelzer.
Not that these economists have a good track record of prognostication.
The American magazine, published by the American Enterprise Institute, reckons that the reason that unemployment is continuing to climb is that the stimulus funds requested by the administration did not even target high-unemployment states.
2009 Newsmax. All rights reserved.
Thursday, November 12, 2009 10:11 AM
By: Gene J. Koprowski Article Font Size
Economists who have the Obama administration's policymaking ear simply do not believe that higher marginal tax rates will retard economic growth, writes economist Irwin Stelzer.
Writing in the The Weekly Standard, Stelzer explains that the administration is “flirting with such things as a 60 percent rate on the incremental income” of high earners.
This tax increase will be rationalized, and described in euphemistic language.
“In the case of Congressmen searching desperately for a way to fund the president's $1 trillion health care plan, a ‘millionaire's tax’ on the order of a 5 percent surcharge on the taxes of anyone earning that sum,” writes Stelzer.
“This is in part a reaction to extreme supply-siders who persuaded Republican politicians that any and all tax cuts actually produce more revenue.”
Stelzer said that liberal economists today do not believe monetary incentives drive risk-taking and hard work.
“Therefore, appropriating a larger portion of national income for the state will not affect the growth rate,” they conclude, writes Stelzer.
Not that these economists have a good track record of prognostication.
The American magazine, published by the American Enterprise Institute, reckons that the reason that unemployment is continuing to climb is that the stimulus funds requested by the administration did not even target high-unemployment states.
2009 Newsmax. All rights reserved.