Back in mid-2010, I wrote that Portugal was going to exacerbate its fiscal problems by raising taxes.
Needless to say, I was right. Not that this required any special insight. After all, no nation has ever taxed its way to prosperity.
We’re now at the end of 2012 and Portugal is still saddled with a weak economy. And the higher taxes haven’t resulted in less red ink. Indeed, according to the Economist Intelligence Unit, government debt has jumped from 93 percent of GDP in 2010 to 124 percent of GDP this year.
Why did higher taxes backfire in Portugal? For the same reasons that higher taxes have failed in Greece, Spain, Bulgaria, France, Italy, the United Kingdom, and so many other nations.
- Higher taxes undermine incentives for productive behavior, thus reducing an economy’s potential for growth. This means less economic output, which also means a smaller tax base. This Laffer Curve effect doesn’t necessarily mean less revenue, but it certainly means that tax increases rarely raise as much money as initially projected.
- Higher taxes usually are a substitute for the real solution of spending restraint (i.e., Mitchell’s Golden Rule). Politicians oftentimes refuse to reduce the burden of government spending because of an expectation of additional tax revenue. Heck, in many cases, higher taxes trigger an increase in the size and scope of the public sector.
So did Portugal learn any lessons from this failed experiment in Obamanomics?
Hardly. Indeed, the government plans to double down on this approach – even though it’s increasingly apparent that higher tax burdens won’t translate into much – if any – additional tax revenue. Here are some excerpts from a report in the Financial Times.
Lisbon plans to lift income tax revenue by more than 30 per cent, raising the effective average rate by more than a third from 9.8 to 13.2 per cent. Anyone receiving more than the minimum wage of €485 a month, including pensioners, will also pay an extraordinary tax of 3.5 per cent on their income. …the steep tax increases facing many families have made the outlook for 2013 – the third consecutive year of austerity, recession and rising unemployment – the grimmest yet. Total tax revenue has fallen considerably below target this year, forcing the government to implement additional austerity measures… The coalition will be relying on increased state revenue to account for about 80 per cent of the fiscal adjustment required in 2013 – a reversal of the original bailout plan, in which consolidation was to be achieved mainly through spending cuts.
Amazing. The government imposes huge tax hikes, which don’t generate any positive results. Yet even though “tax revenue has fallen considerably below target,” confirming that there are significant Laffer Curve issues, the government chooses to repeat the snake-oil fiscal therapy of higher taxes.
Anybody want to guess what’s going to happen? The answer, of course, is that this will further dampen incentives to generate income and comply with the government’s fiscal demands.
The latest increases have stretched the tax system to the limit, says Carlos Loureiro, a tax partner at Deloitte. “The current model is exhausted. We need to do something different,” he says. “Any further increase in tax rates is unlikely to result in increased revenue.” Income from value added tax, the government’s biggest source of tax revenue representing about 36 per cent of the total, has been falling since 2008, despite a sharp increase in the rate – the main rate is now 23 per cent. Both the government and the European Commission have acknowledged the risks of depending on increased tax revenue, which is more growth sensitive, to meet fiscal targets and contingency spending cuts amounting to 0.5 per cent of national output have prepared in case of another tax shortfall.
I almost want to laugh at the part of the excerpt which notes that tax revenue “has been falling…despite a sharp increase in the rate.”
Maybe it’s time for these fiscal pyromaniacs to realize that revenues might be falling because rates are higher. In other words, Portugal not only isn’t at the ideal point on the Laffer Curve (collecting the amount of revenue needed to finance legitimate activities of government), it may even be past the revenue-maximizing part of the curve.
To be fair, there are lots of factors that determine economic performance, so higher tax burdens are just one possible explanation for why the tax base is shrinking or stagnant.
The one thing we can state with certainty, though, is that Portugal’s fiscal problem is too much government spending. The failure to address this problem then leads to very unpleasant symptoms, such as lots of red ink and self-destructive class-warfare tax policy.
If all that sounds familiar, that’s because it’s also a description of what President Obama is proposing for the United States.
P.S. I don’t want to imply that Portugal is a total basket case. True, I’m not optimistic about the country’s future, but at least some lawmakers now acknowledge that Keynesian spending was a big mistake. And there are even signs that Portuguese officials are beginning to realize that lower tax rates should be part of the solution. But good policy may be impossible since so many people now have a moocher mentality.
P.P.S. At the risk of bearing bad news to close the year, research from both the Bank for International Settlements and the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development shows the United States actually faces a bigger long-run fiscal challenge than Portugal.
[…] Class Warfare Tax Policy Causes Portugal to Crash on the Laffer Curve, but Will Obama Learn from thi… […]
[…] Class Warfare Tax Policy Causes Portugal to Crash on the Laffer Curve, but Will Obama Learn from thi… […]
[…] Class Warfare Tax Policy Causes Portugal to Crash on the Laffer Curve, but Will Obama Learn from thi… […]
[…] Class Warfare Tax Policy Causes Portugal to Crash on the Laffer Curve, but Will Obama Learn from thi… […]
[…] Class Warfare Tax Policy Causes Portugal to Crash on the Laffer Curve, but Will Obama Learn from thi… […]
[…] Class Warfare Tax Policy Causes Portugal to Crash on the Laffer Curve, but Will Obama Learn from thi… […]
[…] I also could have cited interesting results from Canada, Denmark, Hungary, Ireland, Italy, Portugal, Russia, France, and the United […]
[…] lower tax rates by citing country-specific research from Italy, Australia, Germany, Sweden, Israel, Portugal, South Africa, the United States, Denmark, Russia, France, and the United […]
[…] with hope for the continent. And I’ve shared specific dismal data for nations such as Portugal, France, Greece, Italy, Poland, Spain, Ireland, and the United […]
[…] Class Warfare Tax Policy Causes Portugal to Crash on the Laffer Curve, but Will Obama Learn from thi… […]
[…] that we haven’t seen much – if any – growth in tax-happy nations such as Greece, Portugal, Italy, Ireland, Spain, and the United […]
[…] Class Warfare Tax Policy Causes Portugal to Crash on the Laffer Curve, but Will Obama Learn from thi… […]
#Unexpectedly
[…] Class Warfare Tax Policy Causes Portugal to Crash on the Laffer Curve, but Will Obama Learn from thi… […]
[…] is inarguably real (no one will work at a 100% tax rate), the only question is where the peak is. Portugal is the latest country to be surprised to find itself on the wrong side of the […]
“Could this discourage the need for increasing profits? How can we and should we discourage growing profits?”
There are known standard solutions to your riddle and they have been and are being cyclically implemented around the world. They always work on the profits. They also fill the mass graves.
Sigh ……… Amanda all that social justice crap they filled your head with in college is biting you in the behind. To answer your question in all seriousness:
LESS government and get out of the way to let us ‘little people’ get on with our productive bourgeois lives. Let us build things, companies, jobs and grow profits! Now if crony capitalism is what you’re really complaining about – I don’t disagree.
“Give a man a fish and feed him for a day. Teach a man to fish and feed him for life.” -Unknown
I love this saying.
Businesses have already moved oversees, because they can make more of a profit using cheaper labor, less restrictions etc. We could stop taxing them all together and that still wouldn’t be enough. Corporations don’t stop at “x” amount of profit. The whole purpose of a corporation will be to make more money until there is no more. Even if this means creating a larger lower class, increasing homelessness, etc. Profits are a way to redistribute wealth to the top. So how can we balance this before it is like a finished game of Monopoly?
My suggestion was to help give the resources for people to become self sufficient. My idea on how to do this might not work. That is ok. We can just move on to the next idea. What are you suggestions?
What about creating business tax brackets? Could we create a way that businesses are taxed different amounts based off of the total profit? Andy compares google and a grocery store. Could a tax bracket for corporations solve that problem of overtaxing smaller businesses? Could this discourage the need for increasing profits? How can we and should we discourage growing profits?
In our town, people are complaining that the gas companies have banded together and have purposely kept gas prices up. It may or may not be true, but companies do not need to merge, to work together, to create a monopoly. My suggestion about the taxes was offered up out of the frustration of limited options. At least I offered an idea that wasn’t based on corporate greed or special interests beyond wanting the best for our nation and to solve the problem at hand.
> tax corporations on total income derived like individual earnings?
A typical grocery store’s profit (revenue – expenses) is about 1%. Google’s profit is about 50%.
What should the corporate tax rate on revenue be?
> What about doing the same for corporations?
What? You don’t think that fines paid to govt is a public benefit?
Free/subsidized housing is typically a disaster. Fix that then we’ll talk.
“They make the Religious Right look like Mardi Gras libertines with respect to their fundamentalist zeal“…
Good one ritchie!
Excellent call…
Proving that politicians only know how to count votes we have the following: From Zero Hedge dated 01/01/2013: CBO Estimates “Obama Tax Cut” To Add $4 Trillion To Deficit Over Next Decade
To Mr. Obama and his allies, this is all about jamming their socio-economic morality down our throats. They make the Religious Right look like Mardi Gras libertines with respect to their fundamentalist zeal.
Maybe it’s supposed to fail and this failure gives Obama and his minions the opportunity to tax and spend even more and to repeat the cycle again and again. They know exactly what they are doing. Failure is the whole point.
“…the United States actually faces a bigger long-run fiscal challenge than Portugal.” we’re also in greater debt than Greece, on a per capita basis. Soros demands Cloward-Piven socialism; Dear Reader aims to oblige.
Yes, Obama will learn — and He will dbl down on on the same actions in order to advance Cloward-Piven here.
“What about treating businesses and corporations like people when it comes to taxes…. either give individuals the ability to write off all living expenses like business expenses(food, health, travel, recreation, etc) or tax corporations on total income derived like individual earnings? ”
Do you really think this would “level” the playing field ? If a corporation earns no profit, do you think taxes on total income would do anything but drive them out of business ? Corporations write off the cost of earning revenue. Individuals can do the same in most countries. The cost of uniforms or driving costs where driving is part of the job. Writing off “all living expenses” would result in no tax revenue unless the individual chose to make a donation. “Recreation?”
Don’t you want to think that through a bit ?
I see that Obama is bragging again about the trillion dollars he has already cut from the budget. Is there a breakdown of the double-counting and myths that make up his claim?
[…] the original bailout plan, in which consolidation was to be achieved mainly through spending cuts. Class Warfare Tax Policy Causes Portugal to Crash on the Laffer Curve, but Will Obama Learn from thi… __________________ "Nothing is more curious than the almost savage hostility that Humour […]
“Maybe it’s time for these fiscal pyromaniacs to realize that revenues might be falling because rates are higher. “
What they’re looking at are only the numbers, and seemingly failing to take into consideration human behavior in a high-tax environment.
[…] I WOULDN’T COUNT ON IT: Dan Mitchell: Class Warfare Tax Policy Causes Portugal to Crash on the Laffer Curve, but Will Obama … […]
What about treating businesses and corporations like people when it comes to taxes…. either give individuals the ability to write off all living expenses like business expenses(food, health, travel, recreation, etc) or tax corporations on total income derived like individual earnings?
The first idea would help even the playing field. This could even spur the economy if people were encouraged to spend their earnings. The second idea could be bad for struggling and small businesses without a business tax bracket, but it could potentially stop corporations from having the stacked advantage of gaining more wealth.
And notably, when a person commits a crime such as stealing, they get: thrown in jail, community service etc. What about doing the same for corporations? Maybe corporations should have to give back to the communities they stole from instead of a fine paid to the government. My suggestion would be have the corporations give to projects that help the community become self-sufficient such as community gardens, help build homes so those less fortunate can own a home outright, etc. This would discourage the continued dependency on such corporations and would encourage corporations, who want to stay in business, to have better ethics.
It is just some ideas from the tip of my brain.
Reblogged this on aikidomereghetti – il blog di davide.
The tax increases are modest. But they are across the board. The middle class has become the target of its own warfare. Their dream of prosperity through redistribution has run out of other people’s money. Their HopNChange has come full circle.
But Portugal is now a known and accepted basket case, a small country that is unlikely to provide any meaningful lessons to American progressives. A better example can be seen in France which is much closer to a role model for those American progressives who want to pour a good dose of mandatory collectivism over capitalism:
http://www.nasdaq.com/article/france-seeks-new-path-to-high-tax-rate-20121230-00019#.UOHdY7-9Kc0
The important point of the story is the phrase:
“…the [75%] tax [on incomes above 1M] would have affected about 1500 people and would have raised about 210 million in revenue [towards France’s 300 billion budget]. ”
And I suspect that the numbers are even the unmodified taxpayer behavior estimates of the government.
But in any case, the important point is that the fact that there are only 1500 people earning over 1M amongst the seventy million French, and the fact that this maximum of taxes would/will raise only 210 million towards a 300 billion budget (ie less than 1/1000th) means that France too HAS reached the point where they have run out of other people’s money… And in that state it will stay, riding a zero to one percent growth trendline, compounding into decline in a world that grows by five percent. That is the terminal state of the Change that was born in Hope. Hope to prosperity through the work incentives of redistribution.
Americans not to worry though. Americans have different DNA. They respond differently to welfare incentives. Besides, the Almighty is on America’s side. What can possibly go wrong. So on with HopNChange say the American lemmings! This one time opportunity arises in America and Capitalists are bent on destroying the people’s once in a lifetime dream. Ignore them. On to France! … And to where France is headed.
How can this be posted to Facebook?
Good piece Dan. A good corollary with the Laffer curve (theory) is how it actually plays out in reality (practice) by charting Federal Individual Income “revenues” as a percentage of GDP. It has averaged about 8% since 1945 and has even trickled slightly higher as top marginal rates have come down. Who would have thunk?