Slightly left of center economic commentary on news, politics and the economy.

The Tax Code Ain’t Nearly So Big as Often Claimed

by Linda Beale

The Tax Code Ain’t Nearly So Big as Often Claimed

I can’t resist pointing readers to tax professor Jim Maule’s excellent post chastising everybody–from those obviously slanted propaganda-tank tax gurus Chris Edwards (you all know him as the purported tax expert from the right-wing pseudo-libertarian Cato Institute, whose other associate, Dan Mitchell, makes similar ridiculous claims in touting the purported “Laffer Theory” about how tax cuts restore tax revenues–I should note that I debated Chris in the run-up to the 2012 elections on Herman Cain‘s ridiculous tax “plan”) and Steve Malanga (you all know him as the purported tax expert from the right-wing Manhattan Institute) to generally reasonable Taxpayer Advocate Nina Olson–about their ridiculous claims of a tax code that runs to the tens of thousands of pages. See James Maule, Code-Size Ignorance Knows No Bounds, MauledAgain (June 5, 2013).

Tags: , Comments (0) | |

“Technology Causes Inequality” Refuted

I’m getting to this a little late due to extensive travel (in South Africa now), but David Cay Johnston has a nice writeup of a recent paper on inequality based on the World Top Incomes Database. The paper, by Facundo Alvaredo et al., is important because it largely refutes the idea that technological change is the big reason for diverging incomes between skilled and unskilled workers. As Johnston writes:

That [sharply different levels of increased inequality] is significant because it means that new technologies and the ability of top talent to work on a global scale cannot explain the diverging fortunes of the top 1 percent and those below, since the Japanese have access to the same technologies and global markets as Americans. The answer must lie elsewhere. The authors point to government policy.

As the paper shows, the income share of the top 1% in the U.S. declined from a high of around 24% just before the Great Depression to a low of about 9% in the late 1970s. Since then, it has soared all the way back to about 23% just before the Great Recession, but falling back to 20% in 2010. Other English-speaking countries have had similar “U shaped” patterns, as the authors describe them (i.e., reaching Great Depression levels again), but the share of the 1% is much less in other countries. For example, in Australia, even though the 1% share is close to what it was in the 1920s, it is still only 10% of total income, compared to 20% in the U.S. This difference is part of the reason that median wealth is so much higher in Australia.

The paper gives examples of other countries where the 1% share is permanently below its 1920s level, such as Germany, Japan, France, and Sweden. In all four cases, that share is only about 10%. As Johnston emphasizes, these countries are all essentially equal to the U.S. technologically (remember back in the 1980s when so many people thought Japan was poised to eclipse the U.S. in technology?), so their substantially lower levels of inequality stand in direct contradiction to frequent economists’ claims that technology is the problem (Richard Freeman has a balanced analysis).

It is also important to point out, as Johnston does, that lower tax rates on the 1% have an impact on this. One suggestion the paper makes is that lower tax rates give CEOs and other top managers more incentive to bargain for higher income, so the effect even shows up in pre-tax income. Obviously, lower tax rates make post-tax income even more unequally distributed.

Comments (0) | |

Going Dark–not just an SEC issue, when companies keep their tax classification secret

by Linda Beale

Going Dark–not just an SEC issue, when companies keep their tax classification secret

Today’s Times includes an interesting piece by Floyd Norris about the problem of companies that are neither private nor public but have (or claim to have) few enough public investors that the SEC allows them to “go dark”–quit reporting their financial statements, or anything else for that matter, to the public at large or even their few public investors–even though at least some of their shares continue to be publicly traded. See Floyd Norris, Going Dark, and Putting Blindfolds on Investors, New York Times (July 13, 2013), at B1.

Tags: Comments (1) | |

Fed Policy and Bond Yields

Update:  Charts and data after the read more.

With the Fed completing a two day meeting and Bernanke holding a press conference today  it may be a good time to make a few comments about bond yields.

In an open economy with a current account deficit the equilibrium interest rate is the one that attracts sufficient foreign capital to finance the current account deficit with a stable exchange rate.  If the currency is rising it indicates that yields may be too high, while a falling currency implies that yields are too low.  This is important to understand because the US 10 year T-bond yields rose 46 basis points in May and the bulk of the increase stemmed from a rise in Japanese yields.  They surged because investors decided that Abenomics was working.  This, in turn, pulled bond yields up some 25 to 35 basis points in Britain, Germany, the US and many other countries.  All of this preceded the release of the Fed minutes and Bernanke’s  Congressional testimony.  Yet Wall Street and many bloggers  seem to ignore the point that two-thirds of the May bond yield rise was due to foreign factors, not the possibility of Fed tapering.

Clipboard01 foreign

Tags: Comments (2) | |

Welfare Reform Kills II

Earlier I noted the research of Peter Muennig, Zohn Rosen and Elizabeth Ty Wilde which proves (at all standard confidence intervals) that welfare reform killed people.  I was alarmed that almost nobody but the must read Bill Gardner noticed this research.  Now Dylan Matthews has a long excellent post on the research and other evidence that anti poverty programs save lives.

This should transform the political debate entirely.  I expect it to have almost no effect.  But the best of the blogosphere is doing its best.

Comments (4) | |

Health Care Thoughts: Conference Wrap-up

by Tom aka Rusty Rustbelt

Health Care Thoughts: Conference Wrap-up

So I do some conferences with a lot of people who are way smarter than me, people literally and figuratively on the cutting edge.

What thoughts are dominating health care these days, especially the provider community? Here is a list of frequent talking points, further in-depth discussion of some of them later.

The provider community is in chaos, seeking “what is the best strategic move to insure survival?”

Comments (9) | |

Guest post: The Affordable Care Act’s Prevention and Public Health Fund

Guest post by Michael Cahill

The Affordable Care Act’s Prevention and Public Health Fund: Why it needs to succeed for America’s Economic Future

What will it take for the Affordable Care, known more commonly as Obamacare, to succeed? Realistically speaking it will take a lot of things for the ACA to be a real success, but one vital area will be managing America’s chronic health problem. This is where Prevention and Public Health Fund comes it. Never heard of it before? Well let’s start with a little background.

The fund was established when the Care Act was signed into law back in 2010. It’s mission is to fund projects aimed at improving American public health. For example outreach programs about healthy food options, walking and biking infrastructure projects, or increasing access to blood pressure screenings at the dentist’s office.

Before the sequester the fund was supposed to invest $15 billion during its first 10 years. But Republican lawmakers have slashed its budget by 40 percent since last year. Now the fund is also being victimized by the Department of Health and Human Services who announced plans in April to withdraw $454 million from the fund.

Comments (6) | |

Deliberate and ….

Chart of the Day: America’s 30-Year Project to Make the Rich Even Richer - Here’s a remarkable chart from EPI..  (hat tip rjs)

Actually, no: Strike that. It’s true that in a normal world it would be remarkable, but in the world we live in it’s actually totally unsurprising. It illustrates the rise in income inequality over the past three decades (top dark blue line), and as you can see, it’s been rising steadily. Totally unsurprising. But then author Andrew Fieldhouse did another calculation. The middle blue line shows rising inequality after you account for taxes and transfers. But what if we had the same tax system we did in 1979? Well, inequality still would have gone up, but it would have gone up significantly less (bottom light blue line). In other words, during an era in which the rich were getting richer anyway, we deliberately set out to reduce their tax burdens so that they could become even richer.

Comments (3) | |