Quote from Zen Student:
Then you will indulge my mentioning that it is a logical fallacy to equate correlation with causation. Many productive countries have high tax rates, but this does not tell us whether they would be more or less productive with lower tax rates, whether the tax rate is the cause of the productivity, or how many individuals / businesses have avoided economic activity in these countries due to the tax system.
All your examples prove is that it is possible for a country to have a high rate of tax and still remain productive relative to some other countries. It does not tell us whether the tax rate is optimal or even desirable.
Well my opinion is that a high tax rate on the rich helps in the long term economic development of a country. It would have been imposible to win WWII whithout such rates. And if we had lost the war we would be having this conversation in Russian. There was an article in the economics magazine last week about how decreasing tax rate over the past 3 decades did not generate any extra real grow rate in GDP.
Few countries are growing under a low tax rate on the top rich. Chile is an example, yet the nation is divided in 2 Chiles, the poor and the rich. Eventually this leads to lots of unhappiness and social problems.
I haven't seen the methodology for this so cannot comment. I would suggest however that personal property rights including the right to keep the proceeds of your labour are perhaps amongst the most fundamental "economic freedoms" and governments who claim the right to a disproportionate amount of citizens personal income do not respect economic freedom. [/QUOTE]
The freedom of economic index is really interesting. Take a look.
Hong Kong comes first always, yet I heard they have some postures on social programs and taxes we would regard them in the US as communist/socialist.
