Originally posted by Ned
Just to make it simple, if one has a tax rate of zero, one gets no revenue. If the tax rate is 100%, one gets no revenue because the private economy is dead. As the rates move from the extremes, up from zero or down from 100%, revenues increase. There is a point where the tax revenues are maximized between the two extremes.
This point has NOTHING to do with spending, although, of course, taxing without spending acts to ****** the economy by itself.
Just to make it simple, if one has a tax rate of zero, one gets no revenue. If the tax rate is 100%, one gets no revenue because the private economy is dead. As the rates move from the extremes, up from zero or down from 100%, revenues increase. There is a point where the tax revenues are maximized between the two extremes.
This point has NOTHING to do with spending, although, of course, taxing without spending acts to ****** the economy by itself.
Originally posted by Ned
Now the reason for this is that tax rates (as opposed to tax revenues) influence private behavior. As the rates change, the behavior changes. But the effects of the behavior change are not instantaneous. Some effects might not be seen for years, just as the changes in the Fed's interest rates have effects many quarters out. So, a drop in the rates when taxes are too "high" causes an immediate drop in revenues followed by behavior changes that bring revenues back up.
Now the reason for this is that tax rates (as opposed to tax revenues) influence private behavior. As the rates change, the behavior changes. But the effects of the behavior change are not instantaneous. Some effects might not be seen for years, just as the changes in the Fed's interest rates have effects many quarters out. So, a drop in the rates when taxes are too "high" causes an immediate drop in revenues followed by behavior changes that bring revenues back up.
Originally posted by Ned
It must be interesting to see which of the two effects we saw with Kennedy and Reagan? I think with the Kennedy cuts, we clearly saw the Laffer effect in action as revenues as a percentage of the economy went UP within a short time after the tax rate cuts.
It must be interesting to see which of the two effects we saw with Kennedy and Reagan? I think with the Kennedy cuts, we clearly saw the Laffer effect in action as revenues as a percentage of the economy went UP within a short time after the tax rate cuts.
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