mdh
Sr. Member
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- Points
- 210
Tax Cut and their true Stimulatory Effect
Current economic models (and economists) are absolutely foolhardy in that they ignore the impact of free access to a domestic market. Quite simply tax cuts are only highly stimulatory and create jobs in a closed-cycle economy. If on the other hand tax cuts are provided that are then spent by consumers on imported goods (let's say Chinese goods), you have instead just taken money out of federal coffers and created a great stimulus in the nation supplying those imports.
I wouldn't call Milton Friedman foolhardy and the attempt to dismiss all current tax cut theory is IMHO unconvincing. Taking money out of "federal coffers" and returning it to the consumer is almost always more efficient (assuming you believe in the primacy of the market) -- and why would you assume that all tax cuts would be spent on "Chinese goods" anyway?
Tax Cuts and who gets them
There is a traditional economic belief that whoever gets those tax cuts is moot and it is simply a dollar issue. That is in fact totally false. As someone with disposable income I am far more likely to save my funds and reinvest in equity (some domestic/some foreign) that someone closer to the poverty line who will immediately dump those newfound funds back into the economy to the benefit of everyone.
Totally false in your view - but hardly a proven case. Tax cuts for those at the poverty line are already an orthodoxy in this country - the real question is why governments won't give the middle class any meaningful tax breaks so they can follow your example and reinvest their own money as they see fit. And you are missing one argument that transcends (narrow) economic theory - namely the moral one. It's not government's money in the first place, but Canadians have allowed themselves to be beaten into submission by a finely-tuned propaganda machine driven by special interest groups (and their media/political allies) arguing that confiscatory tax rates are somehow a signal of "compassion" or a natural feature of being Canadian. They are neither.
The Minimum Wage
Like tax cuts for low income earners, any boost to the minimum wage is immediately recycled back into the economy as those funds are immediately spent. In essence, a raise in the minimum wage not only creates a better standard of living for those earning the minimum wage, but also for all the businesses who sell to those minimum wage earners, and their shareholders. You have the added benefit as previously mentioned which is as working becomes more attractive than collecting EI, more individuals will choose to work, lowering the demand for EI, and lowering EI premiums for the rest of us. Lastly, as you bring people from subsistence to have at least some disposable income, I would argue you greatly reduce the likelihood that family will resort to criminal activity out of desperation (which again due to policing and court costs is another indirect method of reducing taxation on the general public).
This assumes that businesses will simply magically absorb the minimum wage increase (Something the "traditional" economists at the Canadian Federation of Indepedent Business would take issue with) - usually it's passed on to consumers or the business creates fewer jobs. I'm not sure how that improves everybody's standard of living - it can have the opposite effect of creating structural unemployment. EI has merely perpetuated a cycle of poverty in the regions - most of those populations ought to be encouraged to migrate to find gainful employment. It's kept in place because of political reasons - Martin - in one of his few moments of policy clarity - actually cut EI rates in the mid-90s because this damaging effect was recognized. It was restored in the late 90s because the Liberal Party was losing support in the Maritimes.
What does effect domestic labour demand is foreign nations with different labour standards who intentionally deflate their currency in order to create a competitive imbalance and corporate entities with no loyalty to either their home nation or their workers as they scour the world in pursuit of higher profits (and the resulting stock option gains).
Much like Canada did through the 1990s. We pursued a deliberate policy of currency deflation to boost exports at the expense of productivity and now we are paying the price. Higher taxes, regulation, and escalating minimum wage rates aren't going to help boost productivity. And isn't this an odd position for a securities guy to take? I would expect that companies should "scour" the world for profits and enrich shareholders (of which I am one since I hold stocks in an RSP).
Bottom Line: If you want to see your tenets of traditional economics at work, have a look at the US economy, and before you point to the most recent number indicating US GDP growth at 3.8%, try calculating that GDP in a bundle of world currencies since the Bush tax cuts went into effect and you will see the US economy in fact not expanded at all, but instead has dramatically contracted....
Why should we have to measure US economic performance as a "bundle of world currencies"? Denying the obvious - a 3.8 per cent GDP growth rate - and trying to argue that it's a dramatic contraction sounds - again - rather unconvincing. The US economy remains flexible and dynamic despite the impact of the dot-com recession and the war in Iraq. Bush's tax cuts are working to achieve renewed growth.
In sum, if I am interpreting your arguments correctly (and If I'm not please correct me), then Germany, for example, ought to be the greatest economic success story in history - it has high minimum wages, lots of regulation, high taxes, aggressive unions, generous social programs.
In fact, it's become an economic disaster with the highest unemployment rates since the 1930s.
The same goes with France which also practiced the ultimate experiment in a type of extreme minimum wage policy - the short work week. It has been abandoned as a failure. France continues its slide into economic disaster.
Or if you prefer a home grown example - how about Ontario under McGuinty? - higher taxes have been imposed through the health premium, more red tape is being created with each legislative session, the public sector unions are back in force, the minimum wage has been increased - so why isn't Ontario booming?
If we are going to meet the challenges of a 21st century economy we need to do a better job in encouraging enterpreneurial talent, not engaging in the same old failed policies. And while I understand the need for a "balanced approach" on deficits, the massive surpluses created by the federal Liberals have been used as fuel for renewed expansion of the state - not for tax cuts.
cheers, mdh