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In my last piece, The
Laffer Curve and Austrian Economics, I argued that the “Laffer
Maxima” moves depending on where the economy is in the boom-bust credit
cycle. I used an example of a marginal restaurant business in the bust phase,
which fails when the income tax rate on the people who live nearby rises by
100 basis points.
In that piece, I did not
intend to address the impact of taxes on the “middle class” vs.
taxes on “the rich”. A reader raised the question however,
and thus motivated me to write this piece.
As I implied in that piece,
the middle class are obliged to cut their spending dollar for dollar with any
increase in any tax that they must pay. I stated that this is because
their budget is zero-sum, especially in the bust phase. This leads to
an important point: a dollar of tax increase here must necessarily decrease
spending by a dollar. And this is just the primary impact. When this decrease
forces the marginal business under, the secondary and tertiary impacts may be
far in excess of one dollar.
In my example, the marginal
restaurant had 8 employees, and a mortgage on some fixtures and tenant
improvements. Ignoring the impacts to the vendors of tomato sauce and
mozzarella cheese, the default on perhaps $100,000 in debt is very
significant. And so is putting 8 people out of work.
In the bust phase, the
destruction wrought by this tax that most people would consider to be
“small”, is anything but small. And of course this process occurs
all over the country.
It’s worth noting
(though I do not intend to go into detail in this piece) that part of the
problem is that the middle class has very little savings. They live
almost entirely on their cash flow, which is inelastic.
But what happens when taxes
are increased on “the rich”? Is it not “fair” to
redistribute wealth to even out the gaps between the “rich” and
the rest of us? What happens if we increase taxes on the “rich”?
One cannot look at the
economy on the basis of consumption only. It is important to understand
capital accumulation and decumulation.
If a business sells $100,000
worth of product, and it cost $50,000 to make and sell, then they have a
$50,000 profit. This is still true, even if they buy a $50,000 manufacturing
machine. The business should treat the machine as capital which depreciates
over its expected lifetime.
Likewise, if a business is
neglecting its tooling, not investing in research and development, and
deferring maintenance, it may seem to generate a “profit”.
But this is illusory. In an accurate assessment, it is consuming its capital.
If it cannot allocate some of its “profits” towards capital, it
is in reality consuming itself. It will eventually go out of business.
And this is important to
understand when it comes to assessing taxes on “the rich”.
While there are some “rich” people who earn staggering salaries
(e.g. actors and athletes), most “rich” are wealthy because they
own productive assets and investments.
One can’t understand
the impact of taxes on the rich (nor see it immediately) just by looking at
macro economic data. The “1%” do not reduce their personal
consumption if taxes are increased on either incomes or capital gains. This is
because they don’t spend all of their income, much less net worth, on
consumption.
One needs to understand the
concepts of investment, and risk-adjusted rate of return. Obviously, whatever
portion of a rich man’s wealth is taken away in taxes will not be
invested. The wealth will be consumed, either by the government, or those to
whom the government gives it.
An increase in tax serves to
replace investment with consumption. This may even boost GDP that year or
even for a few years. But eventually, the destruction of capital will be felt
in the economy.
This is important, because
capital is the leverage on human effort. We don’t work any harder or
any longer today than people did 10,000 years ago, but we are vastly more
productive due to capital accumulation. If we deliberately enact
policies to decumulate capital in favor of present consumption, this would
have a disastrous effect on our quality of life.
There is a more complex and
pernicious effect of increasing taxes on the rich. And it is politically
incorrect to say it. But it needs to be said. We need less pandering
and more honest discussion. So bear with me.
Let’s compare and
contrast to the wage earner. If the tax on a wage earner who makes $8 per
hour goes up 10%, the wage earner may work an additional 10% more hours (if
he can find the work), or he must spend 10% less.
The one percenter, however,
has different choices. He is investing his wealth to generate a profit. For
every investment, he calculates the risks and the returns if the investment
is successful. He must then subtract the tax. If the net result does not
justify the risk, he won’t invest. The higher the tax, the more
possible investments he will pass over, because they fail this test. He
always has an alternative: the Treasury bond. Only if the risk-adjusted
rate of return exceeds the Treasury will the rich man invest.
If he chooses not to invest,
the result is that innovative start-up technology companies, energy
exploration projects, new drugs and medical devices are starved for funding.
But Treasury bonds go up and up, as does the consumption subsidized by the
government.
This piece should not be
taken as a recommendation to raise the taxes of the poor wage earner. But if
one looks at the true economic impact of taxes, I think I have shown that
taxing the rich hurts the economy—especially in the long term.
The correct solution is to
cut spending, and cut it some more, and then cut it again, and then really
begin to cut. But that is outside the scope of this piece.
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