Tax reform is a really good idea. The U.S. needs a tax policy that has incentives for businesses and entrepreneurs to locate in America and spend at a faster rate on innovation, workers, repairs, and new plants and equipment.
The place to start is the corporate income tax, which harms our international competitiveness in two important ways. First, the 35 percent rate is far too high: when combined with state-level taxes, American corporations face the highest tax rates among our developed competitors. The rate should be reduced to 25 percent or lower. Ways and Means chairman Dave Camp recently articulated a goal of having a maximum rate of 25 percent for both individuals and businesses. He should be applauded for that objective.
Second, the United States remains the only developed country to tax corporations based on their worldwide earnings. Our competitors follow a territorial approach in which, say, a German corporation pays taxes to Germany only on its earnings in Germany, to the U.S. only on its earnings here, and so forth. If we were to adopt the territorial approach, we would place our firms on a level playing field with their competitors.
Proponents of the worldwide approach argue that because it doesn’t let American firms enjoy lower taxes when they invest abroad, it gives them no incentive to send jobs overseas. Imagine two Ohio firms, they say: one invests $100 million in Ohio, the other $100 million in Brazil. The worldwide approach treats the profits on these two investments equally, wisely giving the company that invests in Brazil no advantage over its competitor.
But this line of reasoning ignores three points. First, because firms all over the world will pay lower taxes than the two Ohio companies, the likeliest outcome of the scenario is that both firms will fail, unable to compete effectively with global rivals. Second, when American multinational firms invest and expand employment abroad, it is usually done to sell to these new markets. By expanding markets abroad they tend also to invest and expand employment in the United States. In the end, healthy, competitive firms grow and expand, while uncompetitive firms do not, meaning that our goal should be to make sure that American companies don’t end up overtaxed, uncompetitive, and eventually out of business. And finally, because the U.S. is the holdout using a worldwide approach, it is at a disadvantage as the location for the headquarters of large, global firms. As the U.S. loses the headquarters, it will lose as well the employment, research, and manufacturing that typically is located nearby. As one U.S. CEO told me recently, “Our headquarters are here solely because of an historical accident.”
All of this makes perfect sense. Unfortunately, change is unlikely to happen quickly. The United States has had an income tax for nearly 100 years. During that period you can count on one hand the number of significant, broad-based reforms that have been enacted. Simply put, tax reform is hard. It requires consensus-building and significant presidential leadership.
President Obama is unlikely to provide that leadership, at least in the near term. To begin, he has staked out too narrow a corner by focusing exclusively on corporate reform. Obviously, I agree that a lot has to be done in that area, but in the end good tax policy requires that pass-thru businesses that are taxed at the individual rates should face the same taxes as C-corporations. As Chairman Camp recognizes, this requires broader reform than the administration is discussing.
These issues suggest that comprehensive reform is more likely to be a 2013 legislative item than a 2011 initiative. At the same time, there are rumors that Congress and the administration are interested in moving a tax bill to support economic growth (and which will not be called “stimulus”). How does this fit into the reform picture?
The obvious requirement is that anything done in 2011 should be consistent with the long-run goals for 2013 reform. To my eye, there are two candidates. The first is an immediate rate cut to 25 percent. Unfortunately, to get it right, both the corporate rate and the individual top rate would have to come down. I just can’t see any hope of Democrats lining up to support “tax cuts for the rich.”
The second option is to immediately move to a territorial base, which would permit tax-free repatriation. In its best form, the repatriation rule change would be permanent because it is part of the pathway to fundamental reform and because permanent tax changes have better incentive effects. The U.S. would immediately become a better location for headquarters and benefit from the ability of companies to move trillions of dollars from offshore investments to domestic expansion. If even a single dollar of investment moves into the U.S., our economy benefits.
The U.S. needs broad-based tax reform and Congress is looking for near-term changes in tax incentives. Moving toward a territorial corporate-tax system is the sensible reform that would support the recovery in the short run and pave the way for increased economic growth in the long run.
— Douglas Holtz-Eakin is president of the American Action Forum.
This piece touches a salient reason not to go near the "Fair Tax" proposals bandied about. That is, if I thought for one minute that the other taxes would go away when a Fair Tax would be implemented, I'd go for it. But it won't, and we all know it. (If Ronald Reagan can win a 44 state mandate just wanting to get rid of the Department of Education, and he didn't even come close to doing it, well, you get the idea.) Trimming around the edges is, unfortunately, all we can hope for.
Reply to this commentLinkReport Abuse"President Obama is unlikely to provide that leadership, at least in the near term."
You're kidding right? When has Obama ever provided leadership, on anything?
Reply to this commentLinkReport AbuseDoug, you're right. But you're neglecting a primary component to improving the country's attractiveness as a place to invest in: redirecting immigration policy so that it is built around admitting the skilled and educated workers that we need more of, and whom the companies that (unlike restaurants and landscapers) actually grow the pie and create high-paying jobs need badly.
Our current de facto policy of keeping out the educated and legal while letting the unskilled and illegal in willy-nilly is something that business leaders often cite as a stumbling block to hiring -- they simply can't get the skills they need, and they're thwarted when they try to hire foreign nationals with those skills, so they move R&D and other operations overseas.
Sadly, politicians are good about talking up taxes to improve competitiveness, but they don't see much political payoff in advocating for a fair, meritocratic system of immigration. Thus, they don't talk about it, and nothing gets done.
Politicians prefer to dangle amnesty for the 10-15 million illegals instead, seeing either a deluge of uneducated and impressionable votes or a few pats on the back from the tomato producers lobbies. For the rest of us, this is a red herring. Giving US citizenship to the least-skilled 10% of Mexico's population is unlikely to improve our economic or employment prospects, and it represents an unprecedented fiscal challenge when we're already broke.
What we need is the conversation to shift from rewarding undereducated lawbreakers to letting in the best and brightest, who'll help lift all our ships. And any conversation about improving underlying economic conditions and the business environment for knowledge-based and high-paying industries needs to incorporate this.
Reply to this commentLinkReport AbuseMany Republicans are skeptical of this idea, see article in Bloomberg. A major problem of not taxing worldwide earnings is multinationals will just cook the books to shuffle money around to lower tax rate countries.
Reply to this commentLinkReport AbuseBah. The corporate income tax is not #1 on the list. It is, perhaps, #5.
We need to change the tax system, for sure.
#1 is to stop with the special interest tax credits (sugar, corn ...).
#2 is to make personal returns much, much easier to file.
#3 is to make labor worth as much as capital by lowering the income tax rate and raising the capital gains tax rate.
#4 is to have a fair system for estate taxation so that those born with a silver spoon in their mouths might end up with a bronze spoon instead (better than no spoon at all).
Once we get the personal income tax at a level to produce enough revenue for the country, we should then attack the corporate income tax.
I would be for 0 corporate income tax, with profits passing through to shareholders (like an S corporation). But there needs to be some very good regulation to prevent companies from gaming the system (like S corps do, paying minimal salaries and high profits to avoid payroll taxes).
Reply to this commentLinkReport AbuseOur current tax code is an utter obscenity. Its very complexity is in itself a huge tax on everything productive. Its continued existence in present form should be a national shame and embarrasment, and an insult and rebuke to every citizen. For it is evidence of our profound dysfunction. That we continue to tolerate it, that we continue to allow this thing to expand and metastasize, like some foul giant mold, into such an immutable stinking mass, one that invades, chokes, and poisions every life and enterprise of the nation, is a monument to the depth of our degraded state. It must be crushed, killed, destroyed. Scoured and scrubbed from our land and its ashes salted. It is time for a new declaration of independence, independence from bureaucratic oppression and complexity. We must dissolve these bonds and create a new revenue system-- one designed on purpose. It must fit on one page. We must all pay our fair share of the bill, every man and woman. This must be done, or we will be undone.
Reply to this commentLinkReport AbuseMichael K: All the more reason to be that lower tax rate country.
Reply to this commentLinkReport AbuseWhy should labor be taxed at the same rate as capital?
They are not of the same value. Each should be taxed at the rate that maximizes economic growth. There is no logical reason to tie the two rates together beyond grievance mongering.
Then you double down on the grievance mongering by demanding increases in inheritance taxes.
Reply to this commentLinkReport AbuseThe United States would actually increase its federal corporate income tax receipts if it limited taxation of U.S. corporations' incomes to taxable income generated from U.S. sources. Under current tax law, a U.S. corporation can form a foreign subsidiary as (1) a corporation or (2)(a) an unincorporated entity that is taxed as a partnership, or (b) an unincorporated entity that is disregarded as a separate entity from it U.S. corporate parent. The income or loss of unincorporated entities flows through to the parent corporation and is reported directly on the U.S. parent corporation's return. Whereas, a foreign corporate subsidiaries taxable income has no effect on the U.S. parent corporation's taxable income until the subsidiary attempts to pay dividends to the U.S. parent.
This system encourages U.S. businesses to use unincorporated entities when they anticipate foreign losses and use corporations to operate profitable foreign businesses. Most businesses lose money when they start, and then make money as they become established. U.S. corporation use unincorporated entities until their foreign operations become profitable and then incorporate them. Further, U.S. taxation of the dividends paid by a foreign subsidiary has the effect of locking the foreign profits out of the United States. Consequently, the U.S. tax system currently gets the worst of all worlds, and paradoxically, would generate greater revenue if it stopped attempting to tax income generated by U.S. corporations overseas.
Reply to this commentLinkReport AbuseTax on labor v. tax on capital.
I do believe that the two should be taxed equally. While capital is needed to grow the economy in a capitalist society (hence, capitalism), it produces tremendous wealth. Labor, on the other hand, could be viewed as a commodity.
However, without a capitalist system in place, capital could not create wealth. Without a willing labor force, a capitalist system could not exist. Consequently, labor is as important as capital in creating wealth. Accordingly, both should be taxed the same.
In a sense, capital should be taxed so that the capitalist system stays in place. And if capital is taxed at the same rate as labor, then the laborers (who comprise more of the population than those who own capital) will be willing to keep the system.
The US, whether by good policy or good luck has managed to balance capital in labor enough to prevent revolution. This was not so much the case in 1917 Russia, or in current Libya or Tunisia.
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