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I am particularly concerned about bad policies because significantly higher taxes have been proposed by Barack Obama. His plan would raise the marginal tax rate on the most productive workers more than 10 percentage points — an increase that would bring us near Western European levels. His plan would also raise capital income taxes, taxing capital gains and dividends at 20%, compared to a 15% rate under Sen. John McCain’s plan. A five percentage-point difference might strike you as small, but it is not. I have calculated that a five percentage-point difference in overall capital income taxation over the long haul is equal to a difference in the nation’s capital stock of about 18%. This means a 6% difference in GDP and a 6% difference in the average wage rate. This means that real GDP and the average wage would fall, gradually but persistently declining about 6% after 25 years. That’s not quite a Great Depression, but a significant step towards one.
Lee Ohanian, professor of economics at UCLA (via jeffmiller)

Source: jeffmiller

  • 3 years ago > jeffmiller
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A collection of things I'm reading, writing and thinking about. These are my ramblings and personal thoughts from my travels — all the well thought out stuff is over at my other blog, Ready Fire Aim.

Coming to you live from Denver, Dallas, Charlotte, California, or wherever else my travels take me.

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