|
We need a global maximum, of 0%. I don't want to sound like some kind of hardcore Austrian fundamentalist, because I'm not. Taxes are fine, but levying them on fictitious non-person entities is just a means of obscuring to voters where the tax burden ultimately lies. All taxes are paid by individuals, either directly, or by corporations raising or lowering the prices they charge and prices they pay, to suppliers, employees, owners, and customers. But this just means who bears the burden is now an opaque function of relative bargaining power and price elasticity of supply and demand. But that is not what we want from tax rates. We want them to be an open, transparent reflection of democratically passed laws. To that end, it is far better to levy taxes directly on suppliers, employees, owners, and customers of businesses, rather than on the businesses. This would also have the nice side effect of causing businesses to choose where they locate headquarters and factories based on something other than comparative tax rates, reducing an avenue of both dead weight loss and potential corruption. |
A personal income tax incentivises the state to surveil the economic activity of individuals and play games with nudging people to do X or Y, and puts the burden of tax filing and the consequences of not reporting (which some people just can't do correctly).
Contrariwise, a corporate income tax can be thought of as a "user fee" for the privilege of the corporate veil and limited liability. If you don't want your mom and pop shop to pay corporate income tax, simple: don't incorporate, and be responsible for your personally responsible for your employees' well being. And thus it becomes a driver of small business growth and a progressive taxation (the beneficiaries of bigcorp profits are going to be disproportionately wealthy). If you can't afford an accountant to keep track of what taxes you owe, don't incorporate. Etc.