Showing posts with label capital gains. Show all posts
Showing posts with label capital gains. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 29, 2020

Taxing Businesses for Using Public Resources and for Benefiting from Taxpayer-Funded Privileges

Introduction

     The proposal below is a suggestion as to what business tax rates ought to be, based on the notion that a business should be taxed in accordance with how much assistance it receives from the public, the commons, and/or from taxpayers.
     The idea behind this is one of free enterprise; that a business cannot call itself truly “private” unless it provides most or all of its needs by itself, without the assistance of the government or the state. The goal of the tax proposal below, is to impose punitive taxes, in order to discourage the use of public resources.
     Such resources include taxpayer-funded privileges, monopoly rights, and other unfair advantages which businesses would not have in the absence of the state. Since the state is a mechanism which uses coercion, threats, and violence to extract taxes, it is unfair for businesses to enlist the state to extort from taxpayers in a manner which would be illegal if the businesses did it directly. The state hands taxpayer funds, and lucrative contract deals, over to selected cronies; in a process which is sometimes called either “picking winners and losers”, “economic interventionism” or “Keynesianism”, “crony capitalism”, or “redistribution from the poor to the rich”.
     If and when subsidies and bailouts and other privileges are being offered to businesses, it will be necessary and proper to tax such businesses, in order to provide fairness; whether through a social safety net, or through administrative reforms which could increase the opportunity to compete.

     The rationale for choosing the tax rates, is that: 1) all tax rates combined add up to 100%; 2) the most egregious offenses against principles of responsible enterprise are taxed the most heavily; and 3) the second-least egregious offense is taxed at twice the rate of the least egregious offense, and the third-least is taxed at three times the rate of the least, and so on.
     This means that if a business takes every possible opportunity to use public resources which are afforded to it, then it must pay 100% of its profits going forward (or of its earnings going forward; or of its accumulated wealth, in the event of a revolution, or the repeal of the ban on ex-post-facto laws).
     The time frame in question could be annual – meaning that the proposals apply if a business has committed an “offense against free enterprise” in a given calendar year - or the time frame could be all-time, or cumulative, or any other temporal variable.
     I am leaving the matter of what to tax, and when to tax it, unresolved, in order to make this an open-ended proposal, which is not intended as a particular law, but instead as an open-ended framework. I am doing this in hopes that my proposal will inspire others to build upon it, to make it as specific as will be necessary to develop it into a complete plan for reforming the way we tax business (and tailor-made to the particular legislative and logistical needs of the jurisdiction in question).


Proposals

     #1. If a business discriminates against customers, while maintaining public accommodations open to the market-going public and substantially affecting interstate commerce, and while receiving taxpayer funds, then the business's total amount of taxable wealth, should be subject to a tax of 8.74545%.
     #2. If a business receives bailout funds from the Department of the Treasury, then that business should be subject to a tax of 8.345454%.
     #3. If a business receives lucrative contracting deals from the government, then that business should be subject to a tax of 7.945454%.
     #4. If a business wields a collusive or unnatural monopoly, according to the Federal Trade Commission's Bureau of Competition, then that business should be subject to a tax of 7.545454%.
     #5. If a business is a for-profit entity which was created by government or an agency thereof, then that business should be subject to a tax of 7.145454%.
     #6. If a business receives assistance in declaring bankruptcy, from the Department of Justice and its bankruptcy courts, then that business should be subject to a tax of 6.745454%.
     #7. If a business receives corporate subsidies from the Department of Commerce, and/or any state chamber of commerce, then that business should be subject to a tax of 6.345454%.
     #8. If a business offers publicly traded stock, which is being traded by any public official(s) capable of regulating an industry which is relevant to that stock, then that business should be subject to a tax of 5.945454%.
     #9. If a business receives finance or insurance from the Export-Import Bank, of goods it produces which are purchased in foreign countries, then that business should be subject to a tax of 5.545454%.
     #10. If a business receives trade promotions and trade protections from the Office of the United States Trade Representative, then that business should be subject to a tax of 5.145454%.
     #11. If a business receives a corporate charter, or a limited liability corporation (L.L.C.) designation and protection, from a Secretary of State's office, then that business should be subject to a tax of 4.745454%.
     #12. If a business benefits from favorable government regulations regarding professional licensing standards, in a way that “grandfathers-in” old established companies and “job creators”, then that business should be subject to a tax of 4.345454%.
     #13. If a business receives intellectual property protections (such as patents, copyrights, and trademarks) from the U.S. Office of Trademarks and Patents, then that business should be subject to a tax of 3.945454%.
     #14. If a business benefits from the easy credit and low interest rates which are offered by the Federal Reserve System, then that business should be subject to a tax of 3.545454%.
     #15. If a business receives discounts on public utilities (such as roads, sewage and waste disposal, and electricity and other forms of energy) for buying in large amounts, then that business should be subject to a tax of 3.145454%.
     #16. If a business receives small business loans from the Small Business Administration, then that business should be subject to a tax of 2.745454%.
      #17. If a business benefits from favorable zoning laws which allow wealth to be created, earned, and stored far from where people are trying to take it home to, then that business should be subject to a tax of 2.345454%.
      #18. If a business receives physical property protection from the police, then that business should be subject to a tax of 1.945454%.
     #19. If a business receives bank deposit insurance from the F.D.I.C. (Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation), then that business should be subject to a tax of 1.545454%.
     #20. If a business receives public utilities instead of providing its own utilities, then that business should be subject to a tax of 1.145454%.
     #21. If a business receives physical property protection from the U.S. Armed Forces, then that business should be subject to a tax of 0.745454%.
     #22. If a business occupies land in a manner which makes the ground beneath the surface unusable or inaccessible to the public or to others, then that business should be subject to a tax of 0.345454%.

     Additional Proposal: File criminal charges against businesses which commit offenses #1-#8, in addition to taxing them at the rate mentioned. Their privilege to receive the same sort of privileges in the future, could additionally be curtailed, to help reduce the chance that the businesses will continue to exploit the opportunities offered to them.



Post-Script

     This proposal was inspired and influenced by my April 2016 infographic “Government is the Source of Corporate Privilege”, and by Andy Craig's idea to abolish Secretary of States' offices in order to prevent the creation of new corporations by the state, which inspired that infographic.
     That infographic, which lists ten types of artificial business privilege and their sources in government, is available at the following link:

     To learn more about why I believe that monopolies and recipients of taxpayer funds should be taxed whenever such funds are being offered, please read my May 2019 article “Rent, Profit, Interest, Usury, and Taxing Monopolies”:




Written on September 22nd, 26th, and 29th

Published on September 29th, 2020

Thursday, May 8, 2014

Tax Cuts

The following was written in April 2014, as part of a response to the Campaign for Liberty's 2012 survey questionnaire for candidates running for federal office.



20. Indicate the tax cuts you are willing to vote for:
- Across-the-Board Income Tax Cut
- Capital Gains Tax Cut
- Business Tax Cut
- Estate Tax Cut

     I will vote for all of the above mentioned tax cuts.
     Given the fact that this year we are between 2/3 and ¾ of the way closer to reducing the gap between the 2009 deficit and a balanced budget, it is no longer anywhere near as unreasonable to consider cutting taxes as it seemed five years ago; nor unreasonable to refrain from increasing spending, borrowing, Quantitative Easing, the debt, the deficit, and establishing realistic, permanent limits on debt, spending-to-GDP ratios, and debt-to-GDP ratios.
     A budget that cuts commerce, military, and intelligence first - before carefully cutting Medicare and Medicaid, and the Departments of H.U.D. and Education, and other departments and programs - will make the prospects of decreased taxes and balanced budgets even more realistic. Therefore, I will vote for legislation providing for across-the-board income tax cuts, following cuts in spending and the adoption of a Balanced Budget Amendment.
     I will vote to lower all federal income taxes to 15% - and then, as soon as possible, to 12.5% - for all income earners living above the poverty line. I will also vote for capital gains, business dividends, and estate and gift tax cuts, because they are all duplicative taxes; taxes on the savings of and transactions in wealth which has already been taxed generally as personal income.
     In principle, I am as open to reducing and abolishing general taxes on personal income as I will on reducing and abolishing the four duplicative taxes. This is because these taxes could not rightfully be considered duplicative taxes if the initial income taxation never occurred in the first place. But it is for that reason that I will be more open to abolishing general taxes on personal income.
     I will support abolishing general income taxes gradually (but not before enacting a temporary negative income tax) while keeping the capital gains, business dividends, estate, and gift taxes; for as long as are necessary to balance the budget and pay off the nation's debt. I will sponsor a constitutional amendment which would repeal the 16th Amendment and provide for the federal government to tax capital gains, business dividends, and estate and gifts, but not personal income in a general manner.
     I take this position because to enact taxation on the income of all earners (i.e.,capitation) - instead of earners in special categories – would only serve to perpetuate an unfair balance of the tax burden, risk increasing the costs and bureaucracy of tax collection, and risk that a surveillance state and the militarization of bureaucrats and police officers could be depicted as necessary to enforce it.
     While supporting the reduction of spending and the transition to a temporary negative income tax, I will vote to support legislation providing for the 10% to 15% range of rates now paid on capital gains to be assimilated to 15%, followed by a decrease of that rate to 12.5% as soon as the 15% spending-to-G.D.P. ratio limit – and a provision for swift transition to the 12.5% mark - have been met in a Balanced Budget Amendment.
     I would additionally vote to support removing the second-lowest tax bracket's exemption from the capital gains tax, and I would vote to remove subsidies to businesses which pay less than zero in their taxes due to those subsidies, increasing the rates on all taxes they and their employees pay to the aforementioned 15% to 12.5% range.
     While supporting spending reductions and the negative income tax, I will also vote to support lowering taxes on business dividends from the 15% to 35% rates range to 15% for all, with only the lowest income bracket being exempted. I will also support lowering the estate tax rate from 40% down to 12.5% as soon as possible.
     After spending cuts have been achieved, the negative income tax has been enacted, debt has been reduced, and the negative income tax has been abolished, I will vote to support legislation authorizing the taxation of income and sales only upon condition of such legislation's constitutionality, and of such taxes being apportioned according to either the population of each state, the value of the land in each state, or some reconciliation thereof. I will sponsor a constitutional amendment to that affect, which would amend Article I, Section 2, Clause 3.
     I will additionally sponsor legislation to authorize use of the federal government's power to collect duties, imposts, and excises, which Congress has the constitutionally enumerated power to levy. I will support levying such tariffs in a manner which imposes the highest fees on nations which have the greatest disparity of wealth, and standards on human rights, pollution, and labor safety and health, while imposing the lowest tariffs on nations which have the least of these problems. I believe that this would help avoid the risks of war associated with economic sanctions, as well as encourage the alignment of profitable trade with human rights and a decent standard of living.


     Finally, I would urge most states to double or triple their total revenues coming from the unimproved value of land, while phasing out general taxes on income and sales.





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