Posted on 11/28/2012 11:53:15 AM PST by ExxonPatrolUs
The prospect of higher investment tax rates (on capital gains and dividend income) is on every investors' mind lately.
As it stands, Bush era tax cuts will expire by the end of the year sending the long-term capital gains tax to 25 percent from 15 percent and the dividend income tax to north of 39 percent.
Conventional conservative wisdom suggests higher taxes would be bad for the economy.
But the empirical evidence is less clear. Societe Generale writes about it in a note to clients today:
In terms of the macro impact, the dollar amounts involved are small and will have no meaningful influence on disposable income over the course of the year. Furthermore, most of the investment income tends to accrue to high-income earners who arguably have lower spending multipliers. We therefore dont anticipate any meaningful impact on aggregate demand in the short- and medium-term. As for the long-term impact, traditional arguments against capital gains and dividend taxes claim that they are detrimental to investment and therefore to long- term growth. Yet, empirical evidence suggests a very weak link between effective tax rates on capital gains and GDP. This was a conclusion of a recent report by the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, a well regarded independent policy think-tank.
Here's SocGen's chart showing almost no correlation.
(Excerpt) Read more at businessinsider.com ...
Almost no correlation? 1985 and following looks a little different than the previous period.
Figures do not lie, but liars figure.
This dude is trying to defy common sense. If more money is confiscated from anyone’s capital gains, one has less left to invest or spend.
What the idiot is essentially saying is that private spending is no better than government spending. Tell that to the socialist countries and ask them how prosperous they are.
He is saying there is no correlation no the macro level between gdp growth and capital gains tax rate. I think the chart suggests that, but I think it shows things are better when investors know what a stable tax structure is, which for the last few decades, they don’t.
This form of taxation reflects the basic Socialist hostility to private reserves; private resources. But it is the healthy private reserves, that Americans managed to accumulate from colonial days on, that made it possible for us to once out-produce everyone else on earth, both in total & per capita. Those capital reserves, are the vehicle that enables the entrepreneur to obtain the funds for meeting a human need or aspiration, with an idea that draws investment.
William Flax
Taxes have a "Wedge Effect" between Supply and Demand, which causes a "Deadweight Loss" for the economy, shared between producer and consumer depending on the elasticity of supply and demand respectively.
Raising taxes always has this effect, regardless of what form they take. Businesses will always try to pass on tax increases to customers, and customers will balk at the higher prices. NO MATTER WHAT. So, it is impossible by definition for a tax not to have an adverse impact on the volume of goods and services an economy produces.
The lower the Capital Gains Tax Rate, the higher the revenues (Capital Gains Realizations) to the Treasury!
And, to pre-answer an objection, of course it’s true that taxpayers change the nature of their income streams, and defer capital gains realizations depending on the tax climate.
Which kinda goes to show how incredibly sensitive the economy and its actors are to marginal tax rates, whether Capital Gains or Income Tax rates.
Nearly every rise in the rate is followed by a subsequent drop, but I’d bet if the government spending portion of GDP was removed it would show up a lot better. As a matter of fact, I bet the moderation or delay in the drops is due to greater government spending growth in years subsequent to rate increases...
Thank you Uncle Miltie for your excellent interpertation and charts.
Marginal rates can most certainly be shown to have a strong negative correlation with GDP in the first years of a change.
Ok, that’s a good illustration for capital gains . . . now do it again with marginal income tax rates. ;)
omg, please ignore my previous post. I thought I was in a different thread . . . carry on!
Mainly, people modify how much they work, how hard they try to avoid taxes, and how they present their income to the tax man to achieve the same approximate effect for the Treasury.
Interestingly, I've polled all my friends about what a reasonable TOTAL TAX RATE is for all levels of government. The result is astounding. The more liberal someone is, the lower the rate they specify. My most liberal acquaintances say 10%, and my most conservative say 25%. The fact that it's around 40% is the horror.
I wouldn’t use GDP as a measure of effectiveness of investment income, but if I did, I wouldn’t expect to see appreciable change for 24-36 months on the reduction side, and 9-16 months on the increase side.
So what is a good indicator of how capital gains tax affects things?
Precisely. This country would never have been the economic engine it is without investment of capital over a long period of time. The capital gains tax rate has everything to do with the original investment decision. The Commie Rats are working overtime to destroy capital through high taxation (tax rates, high capital gains taxes, estate taxes), exploding regulatory compliance costs and inflation. I am about to start referring to local Democrats as Communists to their faces.
I think that graph is a good example of Hauser’s Law but it really doesn’t illustrate the Laffer Curve. In fact it seems to contradict the Laffer Curve since it shows that as marginal rates decline so to does tax revenues. Unless I’m reading the graph incorrectly.
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