On Thu, Aug 28, 2008 at 11:50 AM, G wrote:

> When tax rates go up, GOVERNMENT revenue increases

That is demonstrably false:

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB121124460502305693.html?mod=opinion_main_commentaries

Mr. Hauser uncovered the means to answer these questions definitively.
On this page in 1993, he stated that "No matter what the tax rates
have been, in postwar America tax revenues have remained at about
19.5% of GDP." What a pity that his discovery has not been more widely
disseminated.

The chart nearby, updating the evidence to 2007, confirms Hauser's
Law. The federal tax "yield" (revenues divided by GDP) has remained
close to 19.5%, even as the top tax bracket was brought down from 91%
to the present 35%. This is what scientists call an "independence
theorem," and it cuts the Gordian Knot of tax policy debate.

The data show that the tax yield has been independent of marginal tax
rates over this period, but tax revenue is directly proportional to
GDP. So if we want to increase tax revenue, we need to increase GDP.

What happens if we instead raise tax rates? Economists of all
persuasions accept that a tax rate hike will reduce GDP, in which case
Hauser's Law says it will also lower tax revenue. That's a highly
inconvenient truth for redistributive tax policy, and it flies in the
face of deeply felt beliefs about social justice. It would surely be
unpopular today with those presidential candidates who plan to raise
tax rates on the rich – if they knew about it.

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