Corporate Income Taxes are Broken

While tax policy has long been used as a political tool, the basic purpose of taxation is to raise funds for the government. Ideally, taxes should accomplish this goal in as efficient and equitable a manner as possible. Tax codes at both the federal and state levels have long since diverged from this ideal, becoming bloated documents aimed at encouraging us to drive certain cars, have certain occupations, and make a myriad of other choices having nothing to do with government revenue. But for all their flaws, personal income tax codes in the US are simple and efficient in comparison with corporate tax codes.

Corporate income taxes are the only taxes in the US levied on a vague notion of “income”: the difference between revenues and all business-related expenditure. Personal income taxes are in effect revenue taxes, as they do not shrink for the person who spends every dime to get by, nor do they grow for the person who saves 20% of their income. Property and sales taxes likewise do not take into account the payor’s ability to pay; indeed, property taxes occasionally push property owners into bankruptcy. Only corporate income taxes attempt to tax based on a company’s ability to pay, as measured by corporate profits.

Unfortunately, determining a corporation’s profits is complex at best, and can be a subjective matter at worst as companies use myriad techniques to reduce their taxable profits. Small, individually-owned companies often commingle business and personal expenses, reducing taxable profits while gaining personal benefit. In the area of automobile leasing this is so common that accountants typically tell their small business clients to deduct 90% of a personal vehicle lease against their business revenue, as this is the “generally accepted” deduction for such an expense.

Large public companies also have been known to deduct expenses incurred for the benefit of company executives. Corporations use foreign subsidiaries to avoid taxes by paying those subsidiaries for rights to trademarks or other services, resulting in an expense for US accounting purposes. Public corporations also legally keep two separate sets of accounting books: one for the SEC and investors, which attempts to show maximum profitability, and another for the IRS which shows minimum profitability. The complexity of this system imposes a significant burden on both companies and the IRS, as both sides engage in a complex accounting dance to accurately determine profitability.

Why not tax corporations just as the government taxes individuals, by taxing their revenue and not their profit? Revenue is a much simpler number to establish and verify than profit, since no consideration of expenses is involved. The accounting burden for both companies and revenue collection agencies would be greatly reduced, decreasing the drag of compliance on the economy. Gross-receipts taxes, as they are often called, are effectively used in several states including Washington and Delaware. Since gross-receipts taxes are broad-based, US corporate tax rates of around 35% could be replaced by a revenue-neutral revenue tax at a rate of around 1%. For many profitable companies a revenue tax would result in a significant tax reduction, while millions of small businesses would now have to make a small 1% contribution to tax revenue for the first time.

Critics complain that revenue taxes hurt companies like wholesalers that have very low margins – but even commodity intermediaries aim to earn 2-3% in net margins, making the burden of a 1% revenue tax similar to their current income tax burden. And no one seems to complain that a profitless corporation can’t afford to pay its property or sales taxes! A complete migration of corporate taxation to gross-receipts taxation might seem close to impossible at the federal level, with all the winners and losers it would create. But such a system would deliver huge benefits by lowering compliance and audit costs while distributing taxation more fairly across all corporations.

Global warming is real; should you care?

There is little scientific dispute at this point that global warming is occurring, and that humans are causing some part of it, as even the Competitive Enterprise Institute (a conservative free enterprise think tank) is now willing to admit. The remaining question: just how big a problem is global warming, and what are the consequences if we do nothing? An Inconvenient Truth makes it appear that Florida will be underwater sometime soon if we sit idly by. Reality, at least as scientists currently understand it, probably lies somewhere between Al Gore’s doom-saying and CEI’s laughable slogan, “CO2: We Call It Life.”

Of all the potential effects of global warming, rising sea levels are thought to have the most catastrophic consequences. If the Greenland ice sheet or a large part of Antarctica really do melt, the resulting 20 foot rise in sea levels would destroy the majority of the world’s great cities and displace billions of people. But how long will a rise of 20 feet, or even two feet, take at current rates of warming and ice melt? Realclimate.org summarizes recent research here, wherein the most aggressive estimates indicate that Greenland’s ice sheet melting is increasing sea levels by up to 0.57mm per year. But if Greenland continues melting at that rate, it will take one thousand years to raise sea levels one foot!

Even an order of magnitude increase in ice melting would only cause sea levels to rise a foot by 2100. The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change Report’s most aggressive estimate calls for a three foot sea level rise by 2100; this estimate includes significant ice melt. While this scenario has significant implications for coastal cities, it is not apocalyptic, and it also represents an outlier prediction compared to most climate models. It seems then that we should care about global warming in the very long term, but it is unlikely to have a significant impact during our lifetime. There are dozens of environmental and social issues that deserve greater present concern, including the AIDS pandemic and infectious diseases like tuberculosis and malaria, which continue to kill tens of millions annually.

At the same time, it wouldn’t hurt to take some simple steps to curb CO2 emissions growth. The CEI and others complain that it is impossible to curb CO2 emissions growth without hurting the economy. On the contrary, prudent shifts in government policy can reduce emissions while increasing growth. If the United States were to fund all highway construction with gasoline taxes, for instance, this would pass the costs of car travel directly on to the end consumer – which increases economic efficiency while decreasing emissions. I’ve written previously about applying the gas guzzler tax fairly, so that consumers are not rewarded for buying large SUVs instead of large cars. Finally, ending the huge subsidies to the oil, gas, and coal industries would make alternative energy more competitive, while saving taxpayers billions.

I want to be a Farmer

The Census Bureau has reclassified farmers and ranchers as management, with only farm workers officially classified as being in the farming, fishing, or forestry occupations. And according to the USDA, farm households earned 10% more on average than non-farm households. Farming seems like a great business to be in! But if farmers are doing so well, why do we pay them $30 billion per year in subsidies?

Over two hundred dollars in taxes per working American were paid to American farmers last year. On top of that, we protect our farmers from foreign competition in many markets, leaving the American consumer to pay double or triple world prices for commodities like sugar. Meanwhile, the average wheat farm receives twenty grand a year in direct cash payments.

It seems that we American taxpayers have been forking over extra grocery money so that farm management can earn above-average incomes! Proponents claim that American farmers are the most competitive in the world; why not let them compete, saving us on taxes and at the grocery store to boot? Reducing farm subsidies will end a cherished way of life, subsidy-supporters respond. If farming is so cherished as a traditional American way of life, then why does the Census report that only 0.7% of the population is involved in it? Most farm workers are Hispanic immigrants – so exactly what kind of “traditional farming” do farm subsidies mean to protect?

In international negotiations, the Bush administration, like others before it, has always tied reduction in our subsidies to reduction in other nations’ subsidies. Even absent EU cooperation, the US should move forward to slash subsidies and open agriculture markets. Altruistic motives notwithstanding, we should do this simply to save our taxpayers and consumers money.

If America were able to cut subsidies and open agricultural markets, it might just find another problem going away: illegal immigrants wouldn’t want so desperately to come to the US if they could sell us their produce from their home countries.

On Illegal Immigration

Well, what do you want? Do you want cheap labor, or do you want sound borders? Illegal immigration has been an economic boon to the US, providing between 10 and 20 million workers that have moderated the costs of construction, housekeeping, daycare, food service, and agriculture even while oil and other commodity prices are pushing inflation up.

Illegal immigrants have increased the US workforce by 5-10% in recent years, and have been a key factor in recent economic growth. The price: some displacement of poor American workers, growing Latin-American influence on US culture, and insecure borders. Economists are having a hard time measuring American job loss to illegals, chiefly since growth has provided other opportunities (they also find it difficult to measure any net loss in tax collections or state benefits). And while the Mexican border may be insecure, the Canadian border is the only border previously used by anti-American terrorists.

The only price paid so far, then, is the increasing Latinization of American culture.

Politicians on the social right are pandering to some Americans’ xenophobic fear of cultural dilution with the onslaught of immigrants. If you view cultural diversity as a threat, then for you the fear and costs are real. While the border should be secure both on principle and so that the US can create a rational immigration policy, the benefits of illegal immigration have so far outweighed the costs. And guess what: that’s exactly why it’s been allowed to go on for so long.