Well, the idea is that to create something new and innovative you need people to invest into research and production.... and why would you invest in a country that will tax you 75% on any profit you make over 1 mil euro?
If that were the case the US would be FLOODED with investments as the tax rates have been lowered from over 90% in the 1950s, when investment here was incredible, to the current 35% where more and more investments are OVERSEAS (taking US jobs), and much of the money is being hoarded in banks around the world.
http://occupyamerica.crooksandliars.com/diane-sweet/corporations-hoarding-trillions
What you aren't taking into account is that last time I checked, that 35% is the highest corporate tax rate in the developed world. Japan used to be higher, but they lowered theirs.
I'll see if I can formulate a more detailed response to that when I have some free time, but for now I'd like to point out that over 1 mil euro is not exactly uber wealthy.... My dad used to make that much a year, and I wouldn't say he's exactly a fat cat..... if he had to pay 75% of that back in taxes, he definitely could not have hired the extra workers for office and workshop, and without those extra workers he could not have even achieved the same level of income.... so I see your point regarding large corporations, but when it comes to small business owners it works differently...
What was the rest of the world when we were at 90%?
I'll see if I can formulate a more detailed response to that when I have some free time, but for now I'd like to point out that over 1 mil euro is not exactly uber wealthy.... My dad used to make that much a year, and I wouldn't say he's exactly a fat cat..... if he had to pay 75% of that back in taxes, he definitely could not have hired the extra workers for office and workshop, and without those extra workers he could not have even achieved the same level of income.... so I see your point regarding large corporations, but when it comes to small business owners it works differently...
Can't compare that situation with now. A whole lot more players in the game now then there were back in the 50s. What we did was also different back then, not only did we innovate, but we built. We might still innovate, but we outsource the being built part. Couple that with higher standard of living, work place regulations etc, it all adds up. That higher corporate tax rate is just the icing on the cake.
a) Yes, that makes him a fat cat.
b) By investing in the business he'd have lower taxable income. A higher tax rate INCREASES investment back into businesses, not lowers it. I don't think you understand how taxes or economics work.
c) As Randya pointed out, during much of the boom years of the United States we had a 90% tax rate on incomes earned by the top percentiles. It did a lot to fuel the system which enabled more people to become successful. As we started cutting back on those rates we got into deeper and deeper systemic economic trouble.
I dont know that there are a 'whole lot more players' now than then, in numbers or proportions or if that is relevant.
I can look at the propaganda that says lower tax rates creates employment and compare that to employment and see that they dont have a direct correlation.
Yes, we built back then, because of the tax rate structure I have stated.
NOW there is a tax break to send manufacturing offshore.
NOW there is a tax break to take the money OUT of the company and invest it offshore.
Compare the world players from the 50s to now. In terms of manufacturing, in terms of being able to harvest resources etc Countries that didn't have the ability or know how to do things back then, do now and are able to do so efficiently. Especially if they have lax regulations on labor and environmental laws. I would say those impacted our ability to efficiently manufacture as well. At least at the level that we did.
I'm not saying going back to that time as far as regulation, some of it was/is good, but there were more variables that went on back then compared to now.
Not just tax structure, but there were different rules and regulations on businesses that were different back then compared to now. Especially when you consider what goes on in manufacturing world.
There are more variables that are going on then just tax structure.
a) Yes, that makes him a fat cat.
I've got a simpler test for you randya. If you take all of people's money, what's left then?
The argument is lost. Once you take 75% and that doesn't solve the problem (because there's no historical evidence where anyone has taxed themselves into prosperity), what's next? 85%? Then guess what? There's no money left. What's the solution then, when you've "taken" all the money you can from the rich?
I don't know what your life travels have been, but in mine, I've never ever seen where the top tier people were lost anything. If you take money from them, they cut peoples wages. If you took money from them, they cut vendor pricing. The idea that a business owner is going to just take the hit and not do anything but make less money is crazy. That never happens. Someone will pay and 99% of the time, it's the people who can't afford to have that cut.
If you took ALL the people's money over $1,000,000, every single penny, it funds the government for 8 days. Now that all the money is gone, what's next? Where will the money for the other 367 days come from?