Monday, December 9, 2013

Russia’s Vilnius headache and the new look of Moscow’s foreign policy

December 09, 2013

Russia Direct

Follow Us: Facebook LinkedIn Twitter

The week's top stories

In the week ahead, look for fresh perspectives on Russian foreign policy from two entirely new angles: political demography and human capital. Also, don't forget to download our new RD Quarterly on post-withdrawal Afghanistan later today.

Meanwhile, these are the stories that were most popular on RD last week:

 

Moldova: The first test of Russia’s response to Vilnius

Here’s why it’s important for Russia not to overlook Moldova while dealing with Ukraine.

Remembering Nelson Mandela

Dmitry Polikanov, VP of Russia’s PIR-Center, analyzes Nelson Mandela’s enduring legacy.

The Arctic: Confrontation or collaboration?

RD Exclusive: The militarization of the Arctic may be more myth than reality

Events

Dec. 12

Find out what leading scholars think about the U.S.-Russia rivalry in the modern age at this event sponsored by the World Affairs Council.

Washington, D.C.

Dec. 13-14

Learn about the latest trends in Russian political demography at the First International Conference on Political Demography and Social Macro-Dynamics.

Moscow

Dec. 17

Discuss Russia’s role in nuclear nonproliferation and strategic nuclear deterrence at this PONI event hosted by the Center for Strategic and International Studies.

Washington, D.C.

Coming up later this week

Russia’s foreign policy leaders prepare for a makeover

At the annual assembly of the Foreign and Defense Policy Council, Russia’s expert community and policy makers considered foreign policy from an entirely new perspective: human capital.

Political demography and Russia

RD Exclusive: Behind-the-scenes coverage of Moscow’s first international conference on political demography, with a focus on the Sochi Olympics and the new Russian youth movements.

Subscriber Benefits

December Monthly Memo now available

Don’t forget to download the new RD Monthly Memo, “The Arctic: A New Geopolitical Pivot?” which analyzes the role of Russia, the U.S. and other powers in formulating the agenda for the region.

Hidden source code / denial of responsibility Website contractor being grilled. Gov’t denial of any responsibility for security of information. This is a great government!! #Obamacare





Please, you owe it to yourself to watch this video.  

 Illegal code hidden from view in Obamacare.
 

  ONCE YOU SEE THIS, IF YOU CAN STILL DEFEND  OBAMACARE, THERE IS NO HOPE YOU WILL EVER LOOK AT HIS MISINFORMATION AND MISDIRECTION, AND HIS OUTRIGHT AND DELIBERATE LIES TO THE AMERICAN PEOPLE AS WRONG.  MS. CAMPBELL, WHO WAS MICHELLE OBAMA'S DEAR FRIEND AND COLLEGE CLASSMATE, LOOKS LIKE THE CAT WHO SWALLOWED THE CANARY.  WHAT THIS ADMINISTRATION DID TO THE PEOPLE OF THIS COUNTRY IS AN UNDENIABLE HORROR.  IT'S ONLY THROUGH UNIMAGINABLE ARROGANCE THAT OBAMA COULD PERPETRATE THIS FARCE ON OUR COUNTRY.
 

Another Misguided Plan to Burden America with a Value-Added Tax...

Another Misguided Plan to Burden America with a Value-Added Tax

by Dan Mitchell

It's no secret that I dislike the value-added tax.

But this isn't because of its design. The VAT, after all, would be (presumably) a single-rate, consumption-based system, just like the flat tax and national sales tax. And that's a much less destructive way of raising revenue compared to America'scorrupt and punitive internal revenue code.

But not all roads lead to Rome. Proponents of the flat tax andsales tax want to replace the income tax. That would be a very positive step.

Advocates of the VAT, by contrast, want to keep the income tax and give politicians another big source of revenue. That's a catastrophically bad idea.

To understand what I mean, let's look at Bloomberg column by Al Hunt. He starts with a look at the political appetite for reform.

There is broad consensus that the U.S. tax system is inefficient, inequitable and hopelessly complex. ...a 1986-style tax reform -- broadening the base and lowering the rates -- isn’t politically achievable today. ...the conservative dream of starving government by slashing taxes and the liberal idea of paying for new initiatives by closing loopholes for the rich are nonstarters.

I agree with everything in those excerpts.

So does this mean Al Hunt and I are on the same wavelength?

Not exactly. I think we have to wait until 2017 to have any hope of tax reform (even then, only if we're very lucky), whereas Hunt thinks the current logjam can be broken by adopting a VAT and modifying the income tax. More specifically, he's talking about a proposal from a Columbia University Law Professor that would impose a 12.9 percent VAT while simultaneously creating a much bigger family allowance (sometimes referred to as the zero-bracket amount) so that millions of additional Americans no longer have to pay income tax.

Hunt likes this idea.

The Graetz initiative offers something for both sides. It starts, he suggests, with countering the observation once offered by former Treasury Secretary Larry Summers that liberals fear a value-added tax because it’s regressive and conservatives fear it because it’s a money machine. Graetz’s measure overcomes both objections.

Regarding the final sentence of that excerpt, he's half right. Folks on the left will be happy to know that there will be a lot more redistribution through the tax code.

Graetz addresses the regressivity of most sales taxes, not by exempting food, drugs and other necessities as most of the older European systems do, but with a system of credits and offsets... He provides a payroll tax cut and expanded child-care credits focused on low- and moderate-income workers.

But what do advocates of small government get out of the deal?

Well, they do get something in the short run. Graetz wants to use the VAT money to reduce the burden of the income tax. Rates for households are lowered, with the top rate falling to 31 percent. And the best part of the plan may be that it reduces America's uncompetitive corporate tax rate to 15 percent.

But I'm more worried about the long run, particularly after looking at evidence from Europe and Japan.

What's in the plan, for instance, that would prevent the VAT from becoming a "money machine"? Or what guarantees would be put in place to prevent politicians from re-expanding the income tax?

Unfortunately, there don't appear to be any safeguards. Professor Graetz has expressed some support for supermajority rules to protect against tax hikes, but he's quoted in the article explicitly stating that a VAT could be used to generate more money to prop up the welfare state.

The Tax Policy Center found that his proposal succeeds in raising the same amount of revenue as current law. If revenue is to be part of any longer-term deficit reduction, Graetz observes, the value-added tax or the income taxes could be tweaked. “Actually, this would put us in a better situation to address the fiscal crunch down the road,” he says.

That statement scares the heck out of me. We desperately need the right kind of entitlement reform to save America from becoming another doomed welfare state. But what are the odds of getting good changes if politicians think they can continuously kick the can down the road by raising the VAT every couple of years.

Before you know it, we're Greece!

If you don't believe me about the VAT being a money machine, perhaps you'll be more trusting of analysis from the International Monetary Fund. That bureaucracy actually supports the VAT, but the IMF inadvertently revealed in some research last year that the VAT is far more effective at generating new revenue than the income tax.

And that's true for poor nations and rich nations.

This video from the Center for Freedom and Prosperity, narrated by yours truly, explains why the VAT would finance the road to serfdom.

Last but not least, it's worth pointing out that Professor Graetz's proposal has become more punitive over time. Check out this portion of a Tax Policy Center study showing that the VAT rate has been increased and that a new class-warfare tax rate has been added to the proposal.

VAT Graetz

So if the proposal has become more onerous on paper, imagine how much worse it will get once politicians get their hands on it.

P.S. If you want short explanations of the flat tax, sales tax, VAT, and current system, check out these Heartland Institute videos.

P.P.S. To be fair, there's very little indication that Prof. Graetz wants bigger and more expensive government. He's proposing a VAT for the same reason Cong. Paul Ryan has proposed a VAT. They think the revenue can be used to reduce the burden of the income tax. They're not wrong in theory. They just don't appreciate the danger of giving politicians a new source of revenue.

P.P.P.S. George Will correctly warns that the VAT should be off the table until and unless the 16th Amendment is repealed. And Robert Samuelson gives several reasons why this levy should be rejected.

P.P.P.P.S. Some advocates say the VAT is needed to forestall higher income tax rates, but that certainly hasn't been the case in Europe.

P.P.P.P.P.S. You can enjoy some amusing VAT cartoons by clicking herehere, and here.

P.P.P.P.P.P.S. Al Hunt has always been a nice guy on the few occasions I've interacted with him, but it didn't help my reputation when he wrote in the Wall Street Journal back in 1994 that I was a “responsible economic expert on the right.” That sounds like praise, but folks on the left generally only say nice things about their opponents when they're being incompetent or selling out.

P.P.P.P.P.P.P.S. I'll close with some good news. The U.S. Senate overwhelming rejected the concept of a VAT back in 2010, though I think the 85-13 vote overstates the level of opposition. Many left-wing Senators only voted no because it was a non-binding measure. But we don't get many victories in Washington, so I'll take it.

Comment      Like

The "Stupid Party" Strikes Again: Congressional Republicans Poised to Give Up Sequester Victory

The "Stupid Party" Strikes Again: Congressional Republicans Poised to Give Up Sequester Victory

by Dan Mitchell

There's a saying in the sports world about how last-minute comebacks are examples of "snatching victory from the jaws of defeat."

I don't like that phrase because it reminds me of the painful way my beloved Georgia Bulldogs were defeated a couple of weeks ago by Auburn.

But I also don't like the saying because it describes what Obama and other advocates of big government must be thinking now that Republicans apparently are about to do the opposite and "snatch defeat from the jaws of victory."

More specifically, the GOP appears willing to give away the sequester's real and meaningful spending restraint and replace that fiscal discipline with a package of gimmicks and new revenues.

I warned last month that something bad might happen to the sequester, but even a pessimist like me didn't envision such a big defeat for fiscal responsibility.

You may be thinking to yourself that even the "stupid party" couldn't be foolish enough to save Obama from his biggest defeat, but check out these excerpts from Wall Street Journal report.

Sen. Patty Murray (D., Wash.) and Rep. Paul Ryan (R., Wis.), chief negotiators for their parties, are closing in on a deal... At issue are efforts to craft a compromise that would ease across-the-board spending cuts due to take effect in January, known as the sequester, and replace them with a mix of increased fees and cuts in mandatory spending programs.

But the supposed cuts wouldn't include any genuine entitlement reform. And there would be back-door tax hikes.

Officials familiar with the talks say negotiators are stitching together a package of offsets to the planned sequester cuts that would include none of the major cuts in Medicare or other entitlement programs that Mr. Ryan has wanted... Instead, it would include more targeted and arcane measures, such as increased fees for airport-security and federal guarantees of private pensions.

But the package may get even worse before the ink is dry.

Democrats on Thursday stepped up their demands in advance of the closing days of negotiations between Ms. Murray and Mr. Ryan. House Democratic Leader Nancy Pelosi (D., Calif.) brought a fresh demand to the table by saying she wouldn't support any budget deal unless in included or was accompanied by an agreement to renew expanded unemployment benefits that expire before the end of the year—which would be a major threat to any deal.

Gee, wouldn't that be wonderful. Not only may GOPers surrender the sequester and acquiesce to some tax hikes, but they might also condemn unemployed people to further joblessness and despair.

That's even worse than the part of the plan that would increase taxes on airline travel to further subsidize the Keystone Cops of the TSA.

But look at the bright side...at least for DC insiders. If the sequester is gutted, that will be a big victory for lobbyists. That means they'll get larger bonuses, which means their kids will have even more presents under the Christmas tree.

As for the rest of the nation? Well, you can't make an omelet without scrambling a few eggs.

P.S. I suppose we should consider ourselves lucky that this looming agreement isn't as bad as some past budget deals, such as the read-my-lips fiasco of 1990.

Comment      Like

Progress on the Laffer Curve*...

Progress on the Laffer Curve*

by Dan Mitchell

The title of this piece has an asterisk because, unfortunately, we're not talking about progress on the Laffer Curve in the United States.

Instead, we're discussing today how lawmakers in other nations are beginning to recognize that it's absurdly inaccurate to predict the revenue impact of changes in tax rates without also trying to measure what happens to taxable income (if you want a short tutorial on the Laffer Curve, click here).

But I'm a firm believer that policies in other nations (for better or worse) are a very persuasive form of real-world evidence. Simply stated, if you're trying to convince a politician that a certain policy is worth pursuing, you'll have a much greater chance of success if you can point to tangible examples of how it has been successful.

That's why I cite Hong Kong and Singapore as examples of why free markets and small government are the best recipe for prosperity. It's also why I use nations such as New Zealand, Canada, and Estonia when arguing for a lower burden of government spending.

And it's why I'm quite encouraged that even the squishy Tory-Liberal coalition government in the United Kingdom has begun to acknowledge that the Laffer Curve should be part of the analysis when making major changes in taxation.

UK Laffer CurveI don't know whether that's because they learned a lesson from the disastrous failure of Gordon Brown's class-warfare tax hike, or whether they feel they should do something good to compensate for bad tax policies they're pursuing in other areas, but I'm not going to quibble when politicians finally begin to move in the right direction.

The Wall Street Journal opines that this is a very worthwhile development.

Chancellor of the Exchequer George Osborne has cut Britain's corporate tax rate to 22% from 28% since taking office in 2010, with a further cut to 20% due in 2015. On paper, these tax cuts were predicted to "cost" Her Majesty's Treasury some £7.8 billion a year when fully phased in. But Mr. Osborne asked his department to figure out how much additional revenue would be generated by the higher investment, wages and productivity made possible by leaving that money in private hands.

By the way, I can't resist a bit of nit-picking at this point. The increases in investment, wages, and productivity all occur because the marginal corporate tax rate is reduced, not because more money is in private hands.

I'm all in favor of leaving more money in private hands, but you get more growth when youchange relative prices to make productive behavior more rewarding. And this happens when you reduce the tax code's penalty on work compared to leisure and when you lower the tax on saving and investment compared to consumption.

The Wall Street Journal obviously understands this and was simply trying to avoid wordiness, so this is a friendly amendment rather than a criticism.

Anyhow, back to the editorial. The WSJ notes that the lower corporate tax rate in the United Kingdom is expected to lose far less revenue than was predicted by static estimates.

The Treasury's answer in a report this week is that extra growth and changed business behavior will likely recoup 45%-60% of that revenue. The report says that even that amount is almost certainly understated, since Treasury didn't attempt to model the effects of the lower rate on increased foreign investment or other "spillover benefits."

And maybe this more sensible approach eventually will spread to the United States.

...the results are especially notable because the U.K. Treasury gnomes are typically as bound by static-revenue accounting as are the American tax scorers at Congress's Joint Tax Committee. While the British rate cut is sizable, the U.S. has even more room to climb down the Laffer Curve because the top corporate rate is 35%, plus what the states add—9.x% in benighted Illinois, for example. This means the revenue feedback effects from a rate cut would be even more substantial.

The WSJ says America's corporate tax rate should be lowered, and there's no question that should be a priority since the United States now has the least competitive corporate tax system in the developed world (and we rank a lowly 94 out of the world's top 100 nations).

But the logic of the Laffer Curve also explains why we should lower personal tax rates. But it's not just curmudgeonly libertarians who are making this argument.

Writing in London's City AM, Allister Heath points out that even John Maynard Keynes very clearly recognized a Laffer Curve constraint on excessive taxation.

Supply-side economist?!?

Even Keynes himself accepted this. Like many other economists throughout the ages, he understood and agreed with the principles that underpinned what eventually came to be known as the Laffer curve: that above a certain rate, hiking taxes further can actually lead to a fall in income, and cutting tax rates can actually lead to increased revenues.Writing in 1933, Keynes said that under certain circumstances “taxation may be so high as to defeat its object… given sufficient time to gather the fruits, a reduction of taxation will run a better chance than an increase of balancing the budget. For to take the opposite view today is to resemble a manufacturer who, running at a loss, decides to raise his price, and when his declining sales increase the loss, wrapping himself in the rectitude of plain arithmetic, decides that prudence requires him to raise the price still more—and who, when at last his account is balanced with nought on both sides, is still found righteously declaring that it would have been the act of a gambler to reduce the price when you were already making a loss.”

For what it's worth, Keynes also thought that it would be a mistake to let government get too large, having written that “25 percent [of GDP] as the maximum tolerable proportion of taxation.”

But let's stay on message and re-focus our attention on the Laffer Curve. Amazingly, it appears that even a few of our French friends are coming around on this issue.

Here are some portion of a report from the Paris-based Institute for Research in Economic and Fiscal Issues.

In an interview given to the newspaper Les Echos on November 18th, French Prime Minister Jean -Marc Ayrault finally understood that "the French tax system has become very complex, almost unreadable, and the French often do not understand its logic or are not convinced that what they are paying is fair and that this system is efficient." ...The Government was seriously disappointed when knowing that a shortfall of over 10 billion euros is expected in late 2013 according to calculations by the National Assembly. ...In fact, we have probably reached a threshold where taxation no longer brings in enough money to the Government because taxes weigh too much on production and growth.

This is a point that has also been acknowledged by France's state auditor. And even a member of the traditionally statist European Commission felt compelled to warn that French taxes had reached the point whether they “destroy growth and handicap the creation of jobs”

But don't hold your breath waiting for good reforms in France. I fear the current French government is too ideologically fixated on punishing the rich to make a shift toward more sensible tax policy.

P.S. The strongest single piece of evidence for the Laffer Curve is what happened to tax collections from the rich in the 1980s. The top tax rate dropped from 70 percent to 28 percent, leading many statists to complain that the wealthy wouldn't pay enough and that the government would be starved of revenue. To put it mildly, they were wildly wrong.

I cite that example, as well as other pieces of evidence, in this video.

P.P.S. And it you want to understand specifically why class-warfare tax policy is so likely to fail, this post explains why it's a fool's game to target upper-income taxpayers since they have considerable control over the timing, level, and composition of their income.

P.P.P.S. Above all else, never forget that the goal should be to maximize growth rather than revenues. That's because we want small government. But even for those that don't want small government, you don't want to be near the revenue-maximizing point of the Laffer Curve since that implies significant economic damage per every dollar collected.

Comment      Like

The You-Can-Keep-It Obamacare Farce...

The You-Can-Keep-It Obamacare Farce

by Dan Mitchell

On Thanksgiving, I shared a bunch of cartoons mocking the national turkey known as Obamacare.

One of those cartoons, by Robert Ariail, mocked the President for repeatedly lying when he said we could keep our health insurance plans if we liked them.

Well, we have more humor using that theme.

And if you like these images and cartoons, you can keep them!

Our first example (which arrived in my inbox, so I don't know who deserves the credit) will be familiar to fans of the original Star Wars trilogy.

Keep It Image 2

Next we have a Lisa Benson cartoon, which would have been a good addition to aThanksgiving cartoon collection.

Keep It Cartoon 1

Here's a cartoon from Gary Varvel and it shows a group that is now terrified because of Obama's deceit.

Keep It Cartoon 2

As a matter of fact, there already is evidence that many politicians did lose their jobs back in 2010 because of Obamacare.

It would be nice if more of them were punished next year.

Last but not least, we have some doggies that are a bit troubled by a version of Obama's big lie.

Keep It Image 3

If you need more Obamacare humor, you can enjoy various cartoons, videos, and jokes by clicking herehere,hereherehereherehere,hereherehereherehereherehereherehereherehere, and here.

Comment      Like

Featured Post

RT @anti_commie32: Keep up the great work!!! https://t.co/FIAnl1hxwG

RT @anti_commie32: Keep up the great work!!! https://t.co/FIAnl1hxwG — Joseph Moran (@JMM7156) May 2, 2023 from Twitter https://twitter....