Corporate Tax Avoidance

The New York Times fumes that “This country’s corporate tax rates are among the highest in the industrial world, yet the taxes that corporations pay are among the lowest.”

The article doesn’t mention this, but one of the top causes of tax avoidance is high rates. State and federal tax rates add up to an average of about 40%; the European average is now below 25% and declining. Little wonder, then, that few companies are paying the high U.S. rate if they have better options.

The lesson is simple – lower tax rates mean less tax avoidance.

Of course, it would be best to abolish the corporate tax altogether. It’s really an indirect sales tax. Businesses pass on their costs, you see. When it comes down to it, consumers pay every cent of corporate tax. Direct sales taxes are much more transparent — and harder to dodge.

In Defense of Early Termination Fees

Over at the American Spectator, I take a look at a necessary evil that lurks deep in the fine print of most of our cell phone contracts.

More on Brett the Jet

Jonanthon Seidl has an excellent write-up of the Brett-to-Jets trade, in part because he cites yours truly.

Brett Favre Is a New York Jet

It’s official.

I wish him well.

The Cost of Regulation

Wayne Crews and I have a piece in today’s Investor’s Business Daily about the extent and cost of regulation.

Is the Stimulus Working?

The New York Times ominously reports that “G.D.P. Grows at Tepid 1.9% Pace Despite Stimulus.”

A more accurate wording would be “G.D.P. Grows at Tepid 1.9% Pace Due in Part to Stimulus.”

CEI’s Wayne Crews shows why the stimulus package was doomed to fail in a recent CEI Issue Analysis, “Still Stimulating Like It’s 1999.” Worth reading.

Putting the Farm Bill in Perspective

Number of farms in the U.S. — about 2.1 million.

Cost of the 2008 farm bill — $300 billion over five years.

That’s nearly $150,000 per farm, at a time of high food prices.

The Favre Retirement Saga

I take a look at the Brett Favre situation over at the American Spectator Online.

If Brett is traded, I hope he goes to Baltimore. Then it would only be a 45-minute drive to see him play.

Sen. Ted Stevens Indicted

1 down, 534 to go.

Doha Round Stalled Again

Disagreements over farm subsidies have caused the current round of WTO negotiations to collapse. Developing countries are upset that subsidized farmers from rich countries are hard to compete against in the world market.

India’s proposed solution is to trigger a raise in their own farm subsidies if imports rise above a certain level. Other countries found this unacceptable, hence the current impasse.

Rather than fret about unfair competition, developing countries could just sit back and welcome imports from subsidized farmers. Consider it a gift from U.S. and EU taxpayers.

Or better yet, all nations rich and poor could drop their market-distorting subsidies altogether. In the long run, the way to freer trade — and fuller stomachs — is fewer subsidies, not more. All that’s in the way is political inertia.

Unfortunately, in politics as well as in physics, inertia always wins.