Many Wall Street Occupiers are echoing the Communist Party USA’s call to “Save the nation! Tax corporations! Tax the rich!”
There are other Americans, on both the left and the right — President
Obama and House Speaker John Boehner, for example — who call for
reductions in corporate taxes.
But the University of California at Berkeley’s pretend economist
Robert Reich disagrees, saying, “The economy needs two whopping
corporate tax cuts right now as much as someone with a serious heart
condition needs Botox.”
Let’s look at corporate taxes and ask, “Who pays them?”
Virginia has a car tax. Does the car pay the tax? In most political
jurisdictions, there’s a property tax. Does property pay the tax? You
say: “Williams, that’s lunacy. Neither a car nor property pays taxes.
Only flesh-and-blood people pay taxes!”
What about a corporation? As it turns out, a corporation is an
artificial creation of the legal system and, as such, a legal fiction. A
corporation is not a person and therefore cannot pay taxes. When tax is
levied on a corporation, who pays it?
There’s an entire subject area in economics, known as tax incidence,
that investigates who bears the burden of a tax. It turns out that the
burden of a tax is not necessarily borne by the party or entity upon
whom it is levied.
For example, if a sales tax is levied on a cigarette retailer, the
retailer does not bear the full burden of the tax. Part of it will be
shifted forward to customers in the form of higher product prices. The
exact amount of the shifting depends upon market supply and demand
conditions.
What about raising taxes on corporations as a means to get them to
pay their “rightful share of government”? If a tax is levied on a
corporation and if it is to survive, it will have one of several
responses or some combination thereof.
One response is to raise the price of its product, so customers share
part of the burden. Another response is to lower dividends, so
shareholders share a part of the burden. And a considerable portion of
reduced dividend burden falls on ordinary nonrich people.
According to the Tax Foundation, 19% of federal tax returns report
dividend income, but 42% of taxpayers older than 65 report dividend
income. Therefore, it is people, not some legal fiction called a
corporation, who bear the burden of the tax.
Because corporations have these responses to the imposition of a tax, they are merely government tax collectors.
The largest burden of corporate taxes is borne by workers. We
discover that by asking a simple question, such as: Which workers on a
road construction project earn the higher pay — those employed moving
dirt with shovels and wheelbarrows or those doing the same atop giant
earthmovers?
You’d guess the guys operating the earthmovers, but why? It’s not
because they’re unionized or because construction contractors have a
fondness for earthmover operators. It’s because those workers have more
capital (tools) to work with and are thereby more productive. Higher
productivity translates into higher wages.
Tax policies that raise the cost of capital formation — such as
capital gains taxes, low depreciation allowances and corporate taxes —
reduce capital formation. As a result, workers have less capital, lower
productivity and lower wage growth.
In 1980, Joseph Stiglitz, now a Nobel laureate, said that workers
share the highest corporate tax burden in the form of lower wages. A
number of economic studies, including that of the Congressional Budget
Office, show that workers bear anywhere from 45% to 75% of the corporate
tax burden.
Adding to the burden is the fact that capital has the kind of
mobility that labor doesn’t. Corporate capital can flee to other
countries easily, but workers cannot.
Politicians and leftist elites get away with corporate-tax
demagoguery because economists haven’t done well in making our subject
understandable to ordinary people, not to mention that we have derelict
news media people with little understanding.
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