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Saturday, December 31, 2005 ~ 5:34 a.m., Dan Mitchell Wrote:
European bureaucrats using antitrust law to loot American companies. Alan Reynolds' Townhall.com column reviews some of the anti-market antitrust policies of both American and European bureaucrats. Reynolds specifically warns about the growing tendency of European officials to use antitrust law to pillage American companies. The fundamental lesson, of course, is that such policies represent a fundamentally misguided assault on the capitalist system. Monopolies and oligopolies generally only exist when supported by government coercion:
The European Union is a relative novice in using threats of antitrust enforcement to collect cash and dispense favors. But inexperience is no excuse for running amok. Fred
McChesney of Northwestern University, writing in Regulation magazine, noted that "EU antitrust enforcement includes a permanent bureaucracy, largely unreachable by individual national authority, applying
and enforcing its own dictates." This must be great fun for power-mad bureaucrats, and quite lucrative. The EU blocked a U.S.-approved merger between Boeing and McDonnell Douglas to the advantage of their
European rival, Airbus. The EU blocked potentially useful mergers between GE and Honeywell, and between Sprint and MCI, to protect favored competitors -- not competition. Larry Lindsey, former director of the
National Economic Council, has warned of "the use of EU's antitrust policies against challenging American firms." ...The only thing more stupid and wasteful than U.S. antitrust is European antitrust.
What European bureaucrats do to hobble or pillage any European businesses is none of our business. What they do to pillage or hobble American businesses, on the other hand, is very literally our business. And
our money. http://www.townhall.com/opinion/columns/alanreynolds/2005/12/29/180616. html
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Saturday, December 31, 2005 ~ 5:54 a.m., Dan Mitchell Wrote: Puncturing myths. In his Townhall.com column, John Stossel lists 10 myths, two of which deserve special attention. He points out that Republicans have lost their
principles and now spend even more than Democrats - particularly on domestic programs that should be abolished. But this probably is related to another myth,
which is the news media's constant whine that life is getting worse:
To briefly expand on two of the other myths: Republicans shrink government? Not in the past 75 years. At one of his State of the Union
speeches, President Bush was applauded after talking about "spending discipline," but since he became president, the government has hired a
million more people and increased spending more than on President Clinton's watch. It's not just because of terrorism. During Bush's first five years, spending at the Department of Labor was up 31 percent,
Agriculture: 38 percent, Education: 81 percent. And the new prescription drug benefit is yet to be counted. Put a politician in power, and he'll take your money and spend it. That's what politicians do. Even
Republicans. "Life getting worse" is myth No.1 because in TV newsrooms, I hear a constant whine about life getting worse: avian flu
will kill us if terrorism doesn't get us first; crime and pollution keep increasing, and the poor are suffering. But in truth, life keeps getting
better. We live longer than ever, and with less pain (think about dental care in the 1960s). Crime is down. In America, even poor people have homes, cars, and access to music and other entertainment that was
once only available to royalty. Pollution? The air and water keep getting cleaner. http://www.townhall.com/opinion/columns/JohnStossel/2005/12/28/180507.
html
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Friday, December 30, 2005 ~ 11:11 a.m., Dan Mitchell Wrote: A victory for free trade. The "Byrd Amendment" is a reprehensible provision of
U.S. law that allows American companies to steal money from foreign companies. And as is the case with all protectionist policies, it hurts consumers and reduces
exports. So it is gratifying to see that Congress has voted to repeal this odious special-interest handout. The Wall Street Journal comments:
The repeal of the protectionist Byrd Amendment in Congress's year-end reconciliation bill is more than a rare legislative victory. It's closer to a
Christmas miracle. Named after the West Virginia Senator who snuck it into law without debate in a 2001 appropriations bill, Byrd directs antidumping and countervailing duties into the pockets of U.S.
companies that petition for the tariff protection. Byrd was nothing more than a wealth transfer from U.S. consumers and industries that use imports to a small network of savvy protectionists. The miracle is that
repeal happened even with all that concentrated "interest" flowing to politicians who supported Byrd. http://online.wsj.com/article/SB113581685453833448.html?mod=opinion&
ojcontent=otep (subscription required)
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Thursday, December 29, 2005 ~ 2:00 p.m., Dan Mitchell Wrote:
America's self-defeating corporate tax. Usually it is nice to be number one, but not when it comes to high tax rates. The Wall Street Journal comments on two
studies that reveal America has the highest corporate tax rate in the developed world. To make matters worse, the U.S. tax system even is imposed on income that
U.S.-based companies earn in other countries - even though that income is already subject to tax in those other nations. This is why some companies, in an effort to
protect the interests of workers and shareholders, have re-domiciled in jurisdictions with better tax law such as Bermuda and the Cayman Islands. Not surprisingly,
politicians want to punish these companies rather than fix the problems with the tax code:
America now imposes the highest corporate income tax rate among the 30 wealthiest countries. ...the U.S. combined state and federal
corporate tax rate of 39.3% is 10 percentage points higher than the OECD average. ...for those who don't think corporate tax rates matter
in attracting jobs and capital, consider that Ireland, the nation with the lowest corporate tax rate (12.5%), has become the Hong Kong of the West with the fastest pace of economic growth and jobs in the
Eurozone. The two new reports also suggest that the high U.S. corporate income tax rates are economically self-defeating. As the CBO says in its usual academic jargon: "The distortions that the corporate
income tax induces are large compared with the revenues that the tax generates . . . Those distortions bring about reductions in economic efficiency." ...When Chrysler merged with a German auto company
several years ago, it became Daimler-Chrysler, not vice versa -- a decision based in part on the tax regimes of the two countries. When CEOs find Germany to have a more favorable tax system than the U.S.,
there is something terribly wrong with our tax code. Oh, and Germany has since lowered its corporate tax rate by 13 percentage points, while ours remains essentially unchanged. There has been a great hullabaloo
in recent years about so-called "Benedict Arnold" companies (in John Kerry's phrase) that move facilities offshore to Bermuda, the Cayman
Islands and other international tax havens to avoid paying U.S. taxes. That happens because a company incorporated in the U.S. is automatically obliged to make Uncle Sam a one-third shareholder by
paying the first 35% of all profits in taxes. Congress has been debating new layers of punitive taxes to impose on those who flee offshore. This will simply ensure that those companies and the profits they make
overseas will never come back. Congress had a better idea with the 2004 Homeland Investment Act; it allowed companies to bring their foreign profits back into the U.S. this year at a one-time tax rate of
5.25%. The result: an estimated $300 billion repatriated back to these shores and a $15 billion revenue windfall for the U.S Treasury. http://online.wsj.com/article/SB113573828329732712.html?mod=opinion& ojcontent=otep (subscription required)
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Thursday, December 29, 2005 ~ 12:37 p.m., Dan Mitchell Wrote:
Private property rights are the solution to many problems. Issues such as school prayer and smoking get dragged into the political arena, but they are only
political debates because government interferes with private property rights. As Walter Williams explains, neither of these issues would be contentious in a
choice-based system based on private property rights:
The institution of private property offers the liberty-oriented solutions to both the school prayer and the smoking issues. I believe it's a
parental right to be able to decide whether one's child will, or will not, say a morning prayer. Conflict emerges because of government-produced education. While there might be an argument for
government financing of education, there's absolutely no argument for government production of education. Therefore, if each parent were given an education voucher to pay for education, those parents wishing
prayers, or those against prayers in school, could enroll their children in the school that meets their preference. Thus, conflict would be eliminated. ...Private property would solve the smoking issue. ...The
liberty-oriented solution might be to post a sign saying you don't permit smoking, and customers wishing otherwise wouldn't enter. The same principle would apply to restaurant owners who wished to permit
smoking. I fear that too many Americans have contempt for the principles of liberty and opt for solutions that employ the political arena to forcibly impose their wills on others. http://www.townhall.com/opinion/columns/walterwilliams/2005/12/28/18036 7.html
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Thursday, December 29, 2005 ~ 9:19 a.m., Dan Mitchell Wrote:
European Union stats show that low-tax countries are richer. This should not be a surprise, but the European Union's statistical agency has released new numbers
confirming that low-tax countries enjoy more prosperity. Luxembourg is a very successful tax haven that is more than twice as rich as the European Union average.
Ireland, meanwhile, has gone from being the "Sick Man of Europe" to the Celtic Tiger thanks to sweeping tax rate reductions and cutbacks in the size of government. Tax-news.com reports:
Luxembourg and Ireland - both 'low tax' countries - topped the EU's GDP per capita rankings in purchasing power parity figures in 2004.
GDP per capita in the Member States ranged from 43% to 227% of the EU25 average in 2004. GDP per capita in Luxembourg was more than twice the EU25 average, while Ireland was about 40% above average.
...Eurostat points out, a touch sourly, that GDP per capita in Luxembourg is very high partly due to the large share of cross-border workers in total employment. While contributing to GDP, they are not
taken into consideration as part of the resident population which is used to calculate GDP per capita. That simply means, of course, that Luxembourg is more successful than the countries around it at
attracting workers. http://www.tax-news.com/asp/story/story_open.asp?storyname=22192
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Wednesday, December 28, 2005 ~ 12:37 p.m., Dan Mitchell Wrote: Bad news for Russian freedom.
Russia is a bit of an enigma. It has a wonderfully successful 13 percent flat tax, yet property rights and the rule-of-law are
inadequately protected. Unfortunately, the resignation of Andrei Illarionov is bad news for the country's future. Illarionov was the driving force behind tax reform, and
he also helped thwart the Kyoto treaty for several years. Without his wise counsel, it is likely that Russia will move in a more statist direction:
President Vladimir Putin's outspoken liberal [in the European, pro-market sense] economic adviser Andrei Illarionov announced his
resignation to protest what he said was an end to political freedom in Russia. "It is one thing to work in a partially free country, as Russia was
six years ago. It's another when the country has stopped being politically free," Illarionov, 44, was quoted as saying by ITAR-TASS news agency on Tuesday. He said he expected Putin to accept his
resignation. ...Illarionov has long been the highest profile critic within the Kremlin of the Putin administration. Just last week, in what may
have been his last major press conference as adviser, he said: "Russia has ceased being a free and democratic country." http://www.breitbart.com/news/2005/12/27/051227130907.obcu6uet.html
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Wednesday, December 28, 2005 ~ 12:00 p.m., Dan Mitchell Wrote:
The silver lining of the Medicare bill's dark cloud. The new entitlement for prescription drugs is a fiscal disaster, but the Wall Street Journal notes that there is
a tiny silver lining. The legislation expanded health saving accounts. HSAs, combined with high-deductible insurance plans, help reduce the terrible "third-party
payer" problem that has grossly distorted the health care market (consumers do not care enough about price when the government or an insurance company is picking
up the bulk of the tab). If HSAs replace a significant share of traditional employer-provided insurance plans, some of the damage caused by government intervention will be ameliorated:
Both Wal-Mart and General Motors have recently announced they will offer HSAs to their employees. A survey by Watson Wyatt and the
National Business Group found that 8% of large employers will offer them this year, with 18% planning to do so next year. Overall, more than a million Americans are already enrolled in employer-sponsored or
individually purchased HSAs. The basic idea behind an HSA is mating a high-deductible insurance policy with a tax-free savings account to help pay pre-deductible expenses. According to Treasury regulations
released recently, the annual deductible for 2006 must be at least $1,050 for an individual. This gives individuals an incentive to be cost-conscious as they look for health care, even as they are protected
against catastrophic illness or large medical bills. And over time if they're healthy, they can build up savings tax free to pay for care when
they do get sick. ...The real point of insurance, after all, isn't to cover routine check-ups but to protect us from financial crisis in the event of
unexpected injury or illness. Workers being asked to share ever-larger portions of their health care costs are finally starting to recognize that
company money going to pay for health insurance means smaller wage increases. http://online.wsj.com/article/SB113564117136631708.html?mod=opinion&
ojcontent=otep (subscription required)
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Wednesday, December 28, 2005 ~ 10:19 a.m., Dan Mitchell Wrote:
Asked to explain corrupt dealings, U.N. Secretary-General has temper tantrum. National Review and the Wall Street Journal review Kofi Annan's juvenile outburst, which occurred when he was asked to explain his role in the illegal use of
diplomatic status to smuggle an expensive car into Ghana:
Secretary-General Kofi Annan lost his temper - hurling insults at a widely respected senior member of the U.N. press corps. Beyond the
who-what-when-where-how of this episode, the big question is: Why? The broad answer is that the U.N. Secretariat, despite all the recent talk of reform, evidently remains a place of secrecy and privilege, run
by high officials who don't mind talking about their global goals and grand legacies, but find it highly irritating to be held to normal standards of good governance or subjected to anything resembling the
workings of a free press. And in this particular case, given the ferocity of Annan's reaction, one has to wonder if there is even more to it. http://www.nationalreview.com/rosett/rosett200512221325.asp
This is where the missing Mercedes comes in. The Mercedes was purchased by Kojo Annan in his father's name four days before the
Hotel de Crillon meeting--and about two weeks before Cotecna won the U.N. contract. The use of the U.N. chief's diplomatic status qualified the car for a $6,541 discount on the purchase price and a $14,103 tax
exemption when it was imported to his native Ghana. Mr. Volcker's investigators found a memo on the computer of Mr. Annan's personal assistant asking him to authorize a letter to Mercedes. "Sir, Kojo asked
me to send the attached letter re: the car he is trying to purchase under your name. The company is requesting a letter be sent from the U.N. Kojo said it could be signed by anyone from your office. May I ask
Lamin to sign it?" the assistant wrote. Neither Kofi Annan, his aide Lamin Sise, nor his assistant, Wagaye Assebe, can recall what happened, and the original documents have disappeared--but somehow
the Mercedes was purchased with the diplomatic discount anyway. Abdoulie Janneh, the U.N. official who arranged the tax exemption in Ghana was recently promoted to U.N. under-secretary-general, in
charge of the Economic Commission for Africa. Amid the clutter of unanswered questions, one query has the virtue of simplicity: Where is
the car? I have been asking this for weeks at the U.N.'s daily briefing. It was this question that triggered Kofi Annan's outburst. He clearly wants
me to shut up. I'm afraid, Mr. Secretary-General, that would be the wrong thing for me to do. Every schoolboy knows that. http://www.opinionjournal.com/editorial/feature.html?id=110007729
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Tuesday, December 27, 2005 ~ 1:45 p.m., Dan Mitchell Wrote:
German news magazine highlight Eastern European economic miracle. The Spiegel is not known as a market-friendly publication, so it is noteworthy that the German news magazine has a lengthy article reviewing the economic revival in former communist nations. Slovakia and Estonia get much of the attention, and
rightly so. These nations have implemented the flat tax and many other free market reforms. Too bad Angela Merkel thinks Germany needs more government. She could learn a thing or two by looking to the East:
...the former eastern bloc countries are the latest to capitalize on globalization. ...Their fervor is alarming its old-school neighbors in the
West. ...While Franz Müntefering, until recently SPD chairman, garners public approval for condemning the evil power of international capital, the EU newcomers are putting it to profitable use. ...While nearly 5
million Germans are out of work and not a day passes without some company, politician or union griping about the corporate exodus to Eastern Europe, new jobs are being created daily in what were only
recently decrepit planned economies. ...Until the end of the 1990s, Slovakia was considered the "black hole" of Eastern Europe, the problem child holding up negotiations for EU membership. Today
foreign financiers value the little country as an investment jewel. Last year alone, Sario - the government agency for foreign investment - recorded 47 projects worth EUR1.7 billion, and 35,000 new jobs are
being created. With plenty more on the way. In the first half of 2005, some 40 further projects worth EUR2 billion were under negotiation,
the agency reported. ...Slovakia's meteoric rise began as late as 1998... Since then, launching a company just takes a matter of days, the national pension system is being supplemented by capital funding, and
unemployment benefits are accorded only to those who actively look for work and are willing to do part-time community service - until a real
job materializes. But the heart of Slovakia's reforms is a flat tax rate. Since January 1, 2004, a uniform rate of 19 percent has applied to income, corporate and value-added taxes. ...The state and its
bureaucrats have beaten a hasty retreat. The Baltic countries, Estonia first and foremost, are viewed around the world as extremely liberal, open-market economies. ...For HWWA analyst Andreas Polkowski, the
eastern European countries are "miniature economic laboratories." The popular theories of the neo-liberal economist Milton Friedman and others have been implemented "verbatim," he says. http://service.spiegel.de/cache/international/spiegel/0,1518,391649,00.html
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Tuesday, December 27, 2005 ~ 12:09 p.m., Dan Mitchell Wrote:
Has Thomas Sowell finally written the wrong thing? I do not recall ever reading anything by Tom Sowell that did not make 100 percent sense, but his column on increasing the pay of politicians misses the mark. He correctly notes that
politicians waste gargantuan sums of money, and he certainly is right that taxpayers would save immense amounts of money if a $1 million salary attracted ethical
people to government. But he never offers proof that higher congressional pay would lead to better people getting elected. Indeed, his proposal could have the
opposite effect if it encourages the current crop of political hacks to try even harder (in other words, try to bribe even more voters with taxpayer money) to keep their cushy jobs:
The cost of paying every member of Congress a million dollars a year is absolutely trivial compared to the vast amounts of the taxpayers'
money wasted by cheap politicians doing things to get themselves re-elected. You could pay every member of Congress a million dollars a year for a century for less money than it costs to run the Department of
Agriculture for one year. ...You are not going to get the most highly skilled or intelligent people in the country, people with real-world experience, while offering them one-tenth or less of what such people
can earn in the private sector. ...How many people in the top layer of their respective professions are going to sacrifice the future of their
families -- the ability to give their children the best education, the ability to have something to fall back on in case of illness or tragedy, the
ability to retire in comfort and with peace of mind -- in order to go into politics? ...by and large, you get what you pay for. What we are getting
as cheap politicians are often a disgrace -- and enormously costly as reckless spenders of the taxpayers' money in order to keep themselves getting re-elected. Whatever the problems faced by the country, the
number one priority of elected officials is to get re-elected. Nothing does that better than handing out money from the public treasury. Cheap politicians are expensive politicians, currently costing the
taxpayers more than a trillion dollars a year. ...Many people today marvel when looking back at the leaders who created the United States of America. Most of the founders of this country had day jobs for years.
They were not career politicians. George Washington, who took pride in his self-control, lost his temper completely when someone told him that a decision he was going to make could cost him re-election as
President. He blew up at the suggestion that he wanted to be President, rather than serving as a duty when he would rather be back home. Power is such a dangerous thing that ideally it should be wielded by
people who don't want to use power, who would rather be doing something else, but who are willing to serve a certain number of years as a one-time duty, preferably at the end of a career doing something else.
http://www.townhall.com/opinion/columns/thomassowell/2005/12/27/18036 8.html
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Tuesday, December 27, 2005 ~ 10:24 a.m., Dan Mitchell Wrote:
Australian budget surpluses being used the wrong way. Australia has one of the world's freest economies, but one significant black mark is that tax rates are still
far too high. The good news is that the government has a big budget surplus that could be used to finance supply-side tax rate reductions. There is even considerable
interest in a flat tax among economists Down Under. The bad news, though, is that the government is instead using the money to create a special fund to pay the retirement pensions of government bureaucrats. The Wall Street Journal argues that this is not the best use of the money, and also notes that the fund may be misused
by politicians:
Prime Minister John Howard's government, to its credit, is starting to roll back the pain, given that it's expected to be A$11.5 billion over
budget in 2005-06. About time. Australians are taxed 15% on pension savings contributions, 10% on most goods and services, and heft some of the highest marginal income tax rates in the developed world, save in
socialist havens like Sweden. At present, folks earning A$63,001 to A$95,000 pay a 42% marginal rate; those above A$95,000 pay 47%. Next year, those brackets will be bumped up, to A$70,001 to A$125,000
and A$125,001, respectively. But the tax rates themselves won't change. Assuming Australians' wealth will increase over time, more people will likely move into the higher tax bracket; in effect, still
penalizing them for working hard and earning more. No wonder the antipodeans retire at some of the earliest ages in the developed world. Shades of Europe, n'est pas? Now, after all that taxation, instead of
giving that extra cash back to all employees, Canberra wants the board of guardians to invest it for only a small portion of the population -- the
public servants. ...There's also the sticky question of how hands-off the government will be, given the mother lode of cash it's intending to sock
away. Mr. Costello has already publicly implied that most of the money will be invested onshore. There have also been hints that the fund could
be a repository for unwanted assets, such as the government's shares of its effective telecommunications monopoly, if its ongoing privatization
goes belly up. All of this is of course contradictory to the future fund's proposed independence. If Canberra is meddling like this before the
thing is even created, what might it do when it's up and running, and flush with A$18 billion in cash? http://online.wsj.com/article/SB113563362440531590.html?mod=opinion&
ojcontent=otep (subscription required)
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Monday, December 26, 2005 ~ 3:45 p.m., Dan Mitchell Wrote:
The flat tax is the ideal tax system, even for a predatory government like India. Writing for an Indian audience, Deepak Lal explains that a flat tax is the
optimal tax system. His most important insight, though, is that even a greedy government should adopt a flat tax since it facilitates the creation of wealth that
predatory politicians then can redistribute. Needless to say, this should not be the goal of tax reformers, but it should convince class warfare politicians that a flat tax is
a debate about the least destructive way to tax, not a debate about the size of government:
The technocratic answer to the problem of financing public expenditure on public goods, at least economic cost, was given by ...Frank Ramsey
(Keynes' young Cambridge colleague). It involves the taxing of goods with the most inelastic demand most heavily. ...Hence the Ramsey Rule for optimal taxation. But, this rule assumes that the government is
benevolent. Suppose instead it is predatory, and not merely interested in raising a given revenue but in maximising it, at least cost. What taxes
would it choose? As Brenann and Buchanan (in their The Power to Tax) showed, it would choose Ramsey taxes! This has led to a search for a system of taxation which limits the ubiquitous fiscal predatoriness of
governments. The flat tax (first advocated by Robert Hall and Alvin Rabushka: The Flat Tax, Hoover Press) is the answer. In its pure version a flat tax replaces multiple marginal tax rates with a single
marginal tax rate, and abolishes all the complex systems of allowances and reliefs, which governments use for social engineering, or for buying
votes. ...the future of the flat tax might lie in countries which, like the East Europeans, are moving from the plan to the market. The Chinese are said to be considering its adoption. If the Kelkar Commission's
recommendations were fully adopted in India, it would only be a small step to move to a full-scale system of flat taxes in India. This would
curb the traditional fiscal predation of the state and its associated ills like the black economy, and have a favourable impact on the country's growth rate. http://inhome.rediff.com/money/2005/dec/23tax.htm
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Monday, December 26, 2005 ~ 4:38 a.m., Dan Mitchell Wrote:
Government-imposed cartels boost prices. Many states impose barriers to trade in an effort to insulate in-state producers from out-of-state competition.
Fortunately, some of these have been ruled unconstitutional because they inhibit interstate commerce (an approach that courts should extend to electricity and health
insurance markets!). What happens when government-imposed cartels are dismantled? Not surprisingly, prices fall. The Wall Street Journal comments on a
new paper showing big price reductions when Virginia reluctantly allowed competition from out-of-state wineries:
...in addition to violating the Constitution's Commerce Clause, there's also evidence that direct shipping bans reduce competition and inflate
prices. That's the conclusion of a new paper by Alan Wiseman of Ohio State University and Jerry Ellig of George Mason University, who conducted a useful analysis of Virginia's wine market. ...They found that
"while average bricks-and-mortar prices still exceeded average online prices in 2004, the size of the price difference decreased by nearly 40%
compared to 2002," when direct wine shipments were illegal. "More broadly speaking," write the authors, "this result clearly supports
theories that predict how government mandated market restrictions inhibit competition and facilitate higher prices, and how the removals of those bans will facilitate more efficient market outcomes." http://online.wsj.com/article/SB113537745067830863.html?mod=opinion& ojcontent=otep
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Sunday, December 25, 2005 ~ 6:21 a.m., Dan Mitchell Wrote:
Private charity better than government handouts. The Wall Street Journal has an excellent article that catalogs the generosity of the American people,
notwithstanding the smarmy comments of international bureaucrats. But the column also has insights on several important public policy issues. First, it discusses how
private aid efforts are vastly more efficient than clunky government efforts. Second, it reveals that a flat tax would increase charitable giving by boosting income and
wealth. Last but not least, it notes that foreign aid is a dismal failure and that the entire effort should be dismantled:
Americans are "stingy." This was the accusation hurled at the U.S. almost exactly one year ago today by Jan England, United Nations
Undersecretary for Humanitarian Affairs... Even by U.N. standards, it was a particularly absurd anti-American slur--although it no doubt expresses the view of many foreign elites, who have come to believe
that government is the only true source of goodness and charity. ...The quarter trillion dollars a year that Americans provide to sustain the Red
Cross, the Salvation Army, Catholic Charities, the American Cancer Society, their local churches, universities and such is greater than the entire GDP of most countries. ...We suspect that Americans give to
private charities because they recognize that these initiatives work best. Bobby Jindal, a Congressman from New Orleans whose own home was
badly damaged by flood waters, tells us that "by far the most effective relief efforts have come from private charitable aid organizations.
FEMA and other state/local government agencies set up bureaucracies and red tape, while private businesses and charities moved in swiftly to
alleviate the human suffering on the ground." ...There is a mythology in the philanthropic world that Americans are motivated to give by the
somewhat selfish pursuit of a tax deduction. But a surprisingly large percentage of charitable gifts aren't even itemized on tax forms. Moreover, the Tax Foundation has provided compelling evidence that
over the past 50 years--as tax rates on the highest earners have fluctuated from a high of 90% to a low of 28%--American giving has hardly deviated from 2% of personal income. In the 1980s, as tax-rate
reductions reduced the value of the charitable tax deduction by about half, the level of charitable giving nearly doubled. This suggests that
charitable giving would continue to flourish under a flat-rate tax system with no deduction. ...when it comes to funding self-serving bureaucracies that don't produce results--such as much of the U.N. and
most other multi-government foreign-aid schemes--Americans are skeptics. For good reason. Study after study has documented that there is no correlation between the amount of foreign assistance a nation
receives and its subsequent rate of economic development. Think Africa, which has received hundreds of billions of dollars in aid to little positive effect. This suggests that the optimal amount of U.S.
government development aid may be zero. http://www.opinionjournal.com/weekend/hottopic/?id=110007728
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Saturday, December 24, 2005 ~ 2:43 p.m., Dan Mitchell Wrote:
British Tories surrender to the left. The Labor Party may govern England forever. At least that is the likely outcome if the Conservatives continue to betray
the Thatcher legacy of freedom and growth. Not only is the Tory strategy bad economics, it also is bad politics. Voters interested in mooching off the state are
never going to vote for Conservatives in large numbers. Instead, the endorsement of income redistribution is merely going to convince many conservative voters to sit home on election day. The BBC reports:
In an interview with the Daily Telegraph, Oliver Letwin said a future Conservative government should make wealth redistribution its goal.
...Mr Letwin's words will be seen as a break with traditional Conservative policy, which has focused on wealth generation rather than redistribution. It will be seen as a further sign new Conservative
leader David Cameron is seeking to move the party towards the centre ground of British politics into areas traditionally occupied by Labour and the Liberal Democrats. ...His words contrast with Margaret
Thatcher, who said in a 1975 speech shortly after becoming Tory leader: "We have gone as far as we possibly can with the redistribution of income. We really now must concentrate on creating more growth so
that the size of the cake is bigger." http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk_politics/4554878.stm
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Saturday, December 24, 2005 ~ 10:25 a.m., Dan Mitchell Wrote:
More statist policies from Merkel. The first President Bush was one of the most disappointing politicians of the modern era. He promised to cut taxes and freeze
spending, but wound up rolling over for a big tax hike, record spending increases, and costly new regulations. But Angela Merkel may be even more of a failure.
Many had hoped that she would be the Margaret Thatcher of Germany, but instead she appears to be a political hack more interested in getting power and expanding
the size of the state. Not only has she announced big increases in income tax rates and value-added tax rates, but now she wants to resuscitate the terrible EU
constitution. She even wants to make the statist document worse by adding a "social dimension" declaration, which means more income redistribution. The EU
Observer reports:
Angela Merkel, the German chancellor, will propose to attach a declaration on the "social dimension of Europe" to the failed EU
constitution, in a bid to save the charter. ...The declaration should help reassure French and Dutch voters, who rejected the treaty in referendums last spring, largely in protest against globalisation,
enlargement and liberalisation of the service markets. ...Germany takes over the rotating EU presidency in the first half of 2007 and could play a key-role in reviving the constitution, Elmar Brok, a prominent
member of Ms Merkel's CDU party in the European Parliament pointed out. "It will be the main task for the German EU presidency", he said. http://euobserver.com/?aid=20586&rk=1
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Friday, December 23, 2005 ~ 12:42 p.m., Dan Mitchell Wrote:
Foreign aid rewards failure and discourages reform. A Wall Street Journal guest columnist correctly criticizes the foreign aid scheme of a United Nations
advisor. Jeffrey Sachs admits that only 26 percent of foreign aid actually gets used to help poor people - and his calculation is probably over-generous because he
cannot explain why Africa is poorer today than it was 30 years ago when the aid money started flowing. As the author of the column explains, free markets and
property rights are the best prescription for Africa's future:
Prof. Jeffrey Sachs, the U.N.'s Chief Advisor on the Millennium Development Goals, believes Africa needs more cash... His Green
Revolution would spend that money to improve agricultural infrastructure, soil nutrients, water quality and seeds ability to survive harsh climates and insects, and better agricultural infrastructure.
These, however, are precisely the benefits that come from property rights, which also inspire the motivation to invest in, improve and preserve the land -- motivation that does not come from aid, central
control and state serfdom. Prof. Sachs is right about tougher seeds but not about more aid. By his own calculation, "out of every dollar of aid
given to Africa, an estimated 16% went to consultants from donor countries, 26% went into emergency aid and relief operations, and 14% went into debt servicing." He could not account for how much of the
remaining 44% got siphoned off by corrupt officials, nor could he explain why $400 billion dollars of aid over the last 30 years has left the average African poorer. ...African leaders must be pushed to reduce
economic intervention, free financial markets, remove bureaucratic obstacles to setting up businesses, establish property rights and enforce
contract law. These are the forces that release entrepreneurial energy. But the ruling cliques will do none of these unless forced to do so as a condition of aid. http://online.wsj.com/article/SB113452164825921824.html
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Friday, December 23, 2005 ~ 9:24 a.m., Dan Mitchell Wrote:
Markets should control fraud, not politicians. The Sarbanes-Oxley bill is imposing a huge regulatory burden, particularly on small companies. But as John Stossel points out, a competitive market is the best way to minimize fraud. After all,
it was the private marketplace - not government regulators - that exposed the corruption at Enron:
We don't need the government to force businesses to spend half their profits on accountants, because free markets police themselves. Those
that serve customers well are rewarded with more customers; those that do well for investors attract them. Bad guys who cheat get a reputation for cheating. They lose customers, lose investors and go out
of business. ...The competition of the market protects us better than the ever-mounting pile of rules legislators pass. And it keeps the costs reasonable, because the private sector has to bear its own burdens,
while government forces its costs on others. ...Enron and the other recent business disasters are evidence of the market working. Government regulators didn't discover the deceit. Enron's lies were
revealed when private security analysts raised questions and private investors started dumping the stock. http://www.townhall.com/opinion/columns/JohnStossel/2005/12/21/179927.
html
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Thursday, December 22, 2005 ~ 8:42 a.m., Dan Mitchell Wrote:
America's capitalist system is creating more wealth and higher incomes. The press likes to report bad news, and that certainly is appropriate, but it is also
important to periodically look at the big picture. And there is no question that long-term trends in America continue to be positive. A Wall Street Journal column notes that both wealth and income continue to climb in America. Income mobility
continues to give people the opportunity to climb as far and as fast as their talents, abilities, and willingness to work hard will take them. Interestingly, the data do
confirm the left-wing claim that the middle class is shrinking - but only because a growing share of Americans are becoming rich. The only bad news is that the U.S.
would be an even richer nation if government was smaller and less intrusive. But the good news is that government is not nearly as big as it is in Europe, which helps
explain why living standards in America are so much higher:
New reports by the Census Bureau and the Federal Reserve Board on the economic well-being of the typical American family reveal that over
the past three decades, the vast majority of families have experienced a rapid growth in their income and wealth. Now that nearly six out of 10 households own stock and two out of three own their own homes, the
average family -- for the first time ever -- has net worth (assets minus liabilities) of more than $100,000. Median family income has climbed to
more than $54,000 a year. ...The Census data ...show, for example, that in 1967 only one in 25 families earned an income of $100,000 or more in real income, whereas now, one in six do. The percentage of families
that have an income of more than $75,000 a year has tripled from 9% to 27%. But it's not just the rich that are getting richer. Virtually every
income group has been lifted by the tide of growth in recent decades. The percentage of families with real incomes between $5,000 and $50,000 has been falling as more families move into higher income
categories -- the figure has dropped by 19 percentage points since 1967. This huge move out of lower incomes and into middle- and higher-income categories shows that upward mobility is the rule, not
the exception, in America today. ...the U.S. is still the pre-eminent meritocracy, where economic success is still predominantly powered by hard work and saving, not inheritance and privilege. http://online.wsj.com/article/SB113513427028228173.html?mod=opinion& ojcontent=otep (subscription required)
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Thursday, December 22, 2005 ~ 7:49 a.m., Dan Mitchell Wrote:
European politicians want a supra-national tax to fund the Brussels bureaucracy. The European Commission supposedly is moving in a free-market
direction. If that is the case, then Europeans must have a funny definition of capitalism. As Tax-news.com and the EU Observer report, the President of the European Commission is now lobbying for a European-wide tax, and he is joined
by a number of allegedly right-wing politicians and even some organizations that are supposed to represent the interests of the business community. Fortunately for
European taxpayers, a handful of nations have warned that they would use their veto power to stop this hare-brained scheme?
Jose Manuel Barroso, President of the European Commission, has ...hinted at the possibility of an EU tax to fund the budget. ..."We have
to find a way of avoiding such a direct link between national budgets and the European budget," Barroso said. "We have to think about some
reform of the resources of the EU...We should look at a system...that would go beyond negotiations between countries," he added. ...One of
these options is likely to be a proposal for an EU tax, an idea supported by the EU's Christian Democrat leaders including Wolfgang Schussel,
Austrian chancellor, Edmund Stoiber, Bavaria's chancellor, and Nicolas Sarkozy, leader of France's centre-right UMP. However, such a proposal is likely to be fiercely opposed by a number of member states,
including the United Kingdom, Ireland the Czech Republic, Estonia and Slovakia, which would all have the power to veto the measure. http://www.tax-news.com/asp/story/story_open.asp?storyname=22145
Karl Aiginger, director at the Austrian Institute of Economic Research (WIFO) is also supporting the idea. Speaking in a press conference on
Monday together with Christoph Leitl, president of the influential Association of European Chambers of Commerce and Industry (EUROCHAMBRES), he called on the incoming Austrian EU presidency
to test the possibilities to launch a discussion on a common EU tax. ...A number of countries, with Britain as the most outspoken, have traditionally opposed contributions to the budget through direct EU
taxes - something which can only be agreed unanimously by member states. http://euobserver.com/?aid=20595&rk=1
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Wednesday, December 21, 2005 ~ 10:55 a.m., Dan Mitchell Wrote:
Tony Blair's sell-out hurts England - and Europe. The European Commission is a squalid bureaucracy that seemingly exists to funnel subsidies to French farmers.
There was some hope that this system would be reformed as part of budget negotiations, particularly since the United Kingdom holds the rotating presidency of
the European Union. But Tony Blair was manipulated by his continental "friends" and English taxpayers now will cough up more than $10 billion more in tax
payments. But other Europeans also are losers since Blair's appeasement props up a system of subsidies that is retarding European growth. Both Tax-news.com and the Wall Street Journal report on Blair's awful performance:
After the usual midnight haggling, EU leaders agreed the next seven-year EU budget on Saturday morning, with both the UK and
Germany giving up money which will go towards development support in the 10 new member states, including Cyprus and Malta. The UK finally agreed to surrender EUR10.5bn of its budget rebate over the
seven years, up from an original EUR8bn ...The overall budget grows to 1.045% percent of EU output, well below the 1.24% demanded by the European Commission, but up from the UK's original 1.03% proposal.
...Conservative foreign affairs spokesman William Hague said, predictably: "Seldom in the course of European negotiations has so much been surrendered for so little. It is amazing how the Government
have moved miles while the French have barely yielded a centimetre." http://www.tax-news.com/asp/story/story_open.asp?storyname=22122
[Blair] promised not to sign any agreement that would continue wasting 40% of the EU budget on farm subsidies that benefit only 5%
of the population. And as leverage he had the British rebate -- negotiated by his iron-clad political forebear, Lady Thatcher, to compensate the U.K. for the fact that the budget is heavily skewed
toward farm-rich countries like France. But instead of using it as a bargaining chip to win the kind of subsidy cuts that would do away with
the very rationale for the rebate, the chèque britannique became an end in itself. Mr. Blair tried to hold onto as much of it as possible without
being blamed for holding up "progress." The price Mr. Blair was willing to pay for being considered a "good European" again was EUR10.5
billion from the U.K. Treasury and, even more costly, his economic principles. All he got in return was a promise of another look at the budget in 2008. http://online.wsj.com/article/SB113494649291525874.html?mod=opinion& ojcontent=otep (subscription required)
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Tuesday, December 20, 2005 ~ 1:02 p.m., Dan Mitchell Wrote:
Nobel Prize winner warns against German-style tax system in America. Edward Prescott explains in the Wall Street Journal that Germany's economy is in
dismal shape in part because of an oppressive tax regime - and things are going to get worse because of new tax increases. This is why Prescott writes that it is
important to make the Bush tax cuts permanent, particularly the lower tax rates on dividends, capital gains, and income:
...the two sides have agreed to a compromise that will raise taxes on individuals and corporations in an attempt to gather more revenue... Is
this a grim assessment of the U.S. economic situation? No -- such is the sad state of affairs in Germany, a country that just a few months ago seemed like it would finally emerge from the economic Dark Ages that
have defined much of the Continent's situation in recent decades. Instead, one of Europe's most important economies may sink even further into its high-tax, high-unemployment and low-growth miasma.
...what are good tax rates? It's useful to begin with consideration of a simple principle: Taxes distort behavior. From this powerful little sentence comes the key insight that should inform our thinking about
setting tax rates. Any tax, even the lowest and the fairest, will cause people to consume less or work less. Taxes that are inordinately high
only exacerbate this reaction, and the aggregate accumulation of these individual decisions can be devastating to an economy. Good tax rates, then, need be high enough to generate sufficient revenues, but not so
high that they choke off growth and, perversely, decrease tax revenues. ...What makes this [America's] economy so vibrant is its participants' willingness to take chances, innovate, acquire financing, hire new
people and break old molds. Every increase in capital gains taxes and dividends is a direct tax on this vitality. Americans aren't risk-takers by
nature any more than Germans are intrinsically less willing to work than Americans. The reason the U.S. economy is so much more vibrant than Germany's is that people in each country are playing by different
rules. But we shouldn't take our vibrancy for granted. Tax rates matter. A shift back to higher rates will have negative consequences. http://online.wsj.com/article/SB113503904805326884.html?mod=opinion& ojcontent=otep (subscription required)
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Tuesday, December 20, 2005 ~ 11:58 a.m., Dan Mitchell Wrote:
Japanese politicians do the wrong thing even when doing the right thing. The good news from Japan is that the government has announced it is not planning to
double the value-added tax to 10 percent in 2007. The bad news is that this is only a temporary reprieve and that the tax almost certainly will climb in the future. The
worst news is that other taxes are being increased right away. Japan's politicians almost surely must receive their economics training in France. How else can one
explain the fact that they keep increasing taxes and spending, even though these are the policies that have driven the economy into a 15-year period of stagnation? Tax-news.com reports:
Japan's ruling Liberal Democrat Party (LDP) has ruled out an increase in the 5% consumption tax in the fiscal year which begins in 2007 as
part of plans to tackle Japan's ageing society and rising public debt. ..Raising the country's consumption tax rate to between 10% and 15% is an idea that has been endorsed by the government's tax advisory
panel on numerous occasions. However, the move would be a politically sensitive one, and Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi has stated that he
will not increase the tax whilst in power - although his time as head of the ruling Liberal Democratic Party is set to come to an end next September. Instead, the ruling coalition recommended last Thursday the
scrapping of income, residential and corporate tax breaks and raising liquor and tobacco levies beginning in 2006 in a bid to raise 2 trillion
yen (US$17 billion). Ultimately, the tax reform proposals call for "a complete overhaul of the tax system," with an increase in consumption tax to be discussed for 2008. http://www.tax-news.com/asp/story/story_open.asp?storyname=22135
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Tuesday, December 20, 2005 ~ 10:16 a.m., Dan Mitchell Wrote:
Shallow politicians and greedy interest groups block trade liberalization. The Wall Street Journal bemaons the dismal close of the trade discussions in Hong
Kong. This is bad news for the US economy since free trade encourages the efficient use of domestic resources. But this is terrible news for the third world.
Access to global markets literally can mean the difference between life and death for poor people. It is not a surprise that French and Japanese negotiators did the
wrong thing, but it is shameful that the United States was on the wrong side as well:
The most important thing to know about the global trade talks that ended Sunday in Hong Kong is that French President Jacques Chirac
thinks they were a success. That means they were a bust for everyone else, especially the world's poor. ...What a shame. The Doha round was meant to give developing countries the opportunity to use their
comparative advantage in agriculture in exchange for goods and services from the developed nations. In its original form, it would've given an enormous boost to the world's neediest nations -- and, as is
often forgotten, provide cheaper goods to consumers globally. The rich nations deserve a big share of the blame. A draft proposal to give the
poorest countries duty-free and quota-free access to their markets met with resistance from the U.S. and Japan. The Americans argued that if they gave the likes of Bangladesh and Cambodia free access to the U.S.
market, the domestic textile lobby would object. Japan wanted protection for its coddled rice industry. Europe, led by France, was the worst of all in protecting its subsidies. http://online.wsj.com/article/SB113494532922825857.html?mod=opinion& ojcontent=otep (subscription required)
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Monday, December 19, 2005 ~ 11:05 a.m., Dan Mitchell Wrote:
New evidence of left-wing media bias. A new study from UCLA confirms that
the media veers sharply to the left. Of 20 major news outlets studied, 18 tilt to the left. The worst offenders are the news pages of the Wall Street Journal (in sharp
contrast to the pro-freedom views of the editorial page), CBS, and the New York Times. USA Today is the least biased print outlet (and it has a good sports page as well):
Coverage by public television and radio is conservative compared to the rest of the mainstream media. Meanwhile, almost all major media
outlets tilt to the left. These are just a few of the surprising findings from a UCLA-led study, which is believed to be the first successful
attempt at objectively quantifying bias in a range of media outlets and ranking them accordingly. ...The results appear in the latest issue of the Quarterly Journal of Economics, which will become available in
mid-December. ...Of the 20 major media outlets studied, 18 scored left of center, with CBS' "Evening News," The New York Times and the Los
Angeles Times ranking second, third and fourth most liberal behind the news pages of The Wall Street Journal. Only Fox News' "Special Report With Brit Hume" and The Washington Times scored right of the
average U.S. voter. ...Five news outlets - "NewsHour With Jim Lehrer," ABC's "Good Morning America," CNN's "NewsNight With Aaron
Brown," Fox News' "Special Report With Brit Hume" and the Drudge Report - were in a statistical dead heat in the race for the most centrist
news outlet. Of the print media, USA Today was the most centrist. http://www.newsroom.ucla.edu/page.asp?RelNum=6664
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Monday, December 19, 2005 ~ 10:21 a.m., Dan Mitchell Wrote:
Rich people use Medicaid program to bilk taxpayers. The Wall Street Journal
scolds the AARP for lobbying against a reform that would slightly curtail the sleazy manipulation of Medicaid. Under current rules, very wealthy seniors can get a free
ride in a nursing home from taxpayers. The House of Representatives is trying to impose a tiny bit of rationality on this corrupting practice, but the fear-mongerers at
AARP are scaring seniors and pressuring lawmakers to keep the gravy train rolling:
...long-term care is Medicaid's biggest single cost -- and many recipients of this largesse are anything but poor. One reason is that, for purposes
of Medicaid nursing home eligibility, people are allowed to retain unlimited income as long as their medical expenses -- including long-term care -- are high enough. Another big reason is that they can
also keep unlimited assets in the form of home equity, a business or other kinds of wealth. ...hundreds of eligibility "loopholes" ...allow
individuals, especially those advised by Medicaid planning attorneys, to qualify for Medicaid long-term care benefits without spending down their own wealth for care. ...he House of Representatives recently
passed legislation to curtail a few of the most egregious abuses. ...AARP has nevertheless gone ballistic, claiming that the House reforms
"seriously threaten the ability of millions of Americans to get needed long-term care services" and "will deny millions of older and disabled
Americans the long-term care services they need and leave them vulnerable to substandard care." ...AARP's position and tactics are wrong, hurtful and dangerous. ...Denying public welfare to people with
three-quarters of a million dollars in home equity does not reduce their access to care. ...The more fundamental questions to ask are why Medicaid should be used as a kind of inheritance insurance for
middle-class baby-boomer heirs -- and how this practice protects Americans most in need? ...Boil it all down and you're left with only one conclusion. Faced with the choice of supporting the use of Medicaid for
people genuinely in need, or grabbing what it can for its well-heeled members and their heirs, AARP took the low road. http://online.wsj.com/article/SB113477649883625141.html?mod=opinion& ojcontent=otep (subscription required)
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Sunday, December 18, 2005 ~ 11:18 a.m., Dan Mitchell Wrote:
Oregon judges trample rule-of-law in effort to block property rights. Is it more reprehensible for a judge to overturn a lawful referendum because of
ideological bias? Or is it more reprehensible for a judge to overturn a referendum designed to protect property rights? Overturning a legal referendum is rather
repugnant because the rule-of-law is replaced by judicial fiat. On the other hand, it is very disturbing when the people who are supposed to protect rights are complicit
in a scheme to undermine those rights. In either case, the Wall Street Journal has a very disturbing story about biased judges in Oregon. Voters have twice voted to
protect private property rights, and each time that decision has been voided on spurious grounds. Now voters may try to recall a judge, which would send the right
signal to other judges who think their personal biases should trump the law:
Oregonians, like many others, have been fighting to force their state government to honor property rights. Like reformers in other states,
residents here had seized upon the one tool more powerful than entrenched state politicians: the ballot initiative. In 2000 and again in 2004, voters passed measures to protect landowners from state
regulations that reduced their property value. ...initiatives are only as powerful as the court system lets them be. Two separate judges struck
down the property measures on embarrassing legal grounds. ...Oregon's property regime traces back to the 1970s, when elites worried that all
the rednecks in the pretty parts of the state might get the uppity idea of developing their land and ruining urbanites' weekend playground. A new law gave the state control of land use, stripping power from
counties that were far better positioned to respond to local needs. The law was also behind "urban growth boundaries," within which
development was fair game. Anything outside was labeled "forest" or "farming" or "open" land and frozen in time. In addition to its abuse of
constitutionally protected property rights, the law has also had devastating economic effects. Property prices inside the boundary artificially skyrocketed, while rural areas were barred from
development that would create new jobs. No other state has been foolish enough to pass a copy of the law. http://www.opinionjournal.com/cc/?id=110007682
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Saturday, December 17, 2005 ~ 11:55 a.m., Dan Mitchell Wrote:
Radical environmentalists are collectivists in drag. George Will's column on oil drilling in Alaska punctures the left's hysterical claims about the environment. He
points out that the Caribou population exploded after the Trans-Alaska Pipeline was built - notwithstanding predictions of disaster. Will's best insight is the comment
about the collectivist mindset of self-styled environmentalists. In the Washington policy, the standard joke is that they are watermelons since they are green on the outside and red on the inside:
Few opponents of energy development in what they call ``pristine'' ANWR have visited it. Those who have and think it is ``pristine'' must
have visited during the 56 days a year when it is without sunlight. They missed the roads, stores, houses, military installations, airstrip and
school. They did not miss seeing the trees in area 1002. There are no trees. Opponents worry that the caribou will be disconsolate about, and their reproduction disrupted by, this intrusion by man. The same was
said 30 years ago by opponents of the Trans-Alaska Pipeline that brings heated oil south from Prudhoe Bay. Since the oil began flowing, the caribou have increased from 5,000 to 31,000. Perhaps the pipeline's
heat makes them amorous. ...For some people, environmentalism is collectivism in drag. Such people use environmental causes and rhetoric not to change the political climate for the purpose of environmental
improvement. Rather, for them, changing the society's politics is the end, and environmental policies are mere means to that end. The unending argument in political philosophy concerns constantly
adjusting society's balance between freedom and equality. The primary goal of collectivism -- of socialism in Europe and contemporary liberalism in America -- is to enlarge governmental supervision of
individuals' lives. This is done in the name of equality. http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/12/14/AR200
5121401933.html
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Friday, December 16, 2005 ~ 8:55 a.m., Dan Mitchell Wrote:
British Ambassador leaks the truth about European farm subsidies. The U.K.'s ambassador to Poland performed a valuable service by telling the truth
about Europe's immoral system of farm subsidies. Sadly, Tony Blair's desire to be a "good European" is leading him to abandon common sense in a futile effort to get incremental reform. The Wall Street Journal urges Blair to fight for the right
principle, but that it would take a leader like Churchill or Thatcher to act with such courage. Tony Blair, sadly, does not have that fortitude:
An astonishing 99% of Frenchmen don't want Jacques Chirac to run for a third term, a new opinion poll shows. So how can such a discredited
politician still be calling the shots on the EU budget? Apparently, even the British haven't learned that appeasement never works -- whether it's
with Nazis, terrorists or French presidents hooked on agro-subsidies. Tony Blair's offer to forgo part of the British rebate without touching the Common Agricultural Policy, which still eats up 40% of the EU
budget, produced a rather predictable reaction from the main beneficiaries of the CAP. Sensing vulnerability on the prime minister's part, Mr. Chirac immediately declared the offer unsatisfactory and
demanded more. ...Sir Charles Crawford, the British ambassador to Warsaw, wrote an "internal" email that somehow found its way to the
press. The CAP is "the most stupid, immoral state-subsidized policy in human history, give or take communism," he wrote. "It's a program
which uses inefficient transfers of taxpayers' money to bloat rich French landowners and so pump up food prices in Europe, thereby creating poverty in Africa, which we then fail to solve through
inefficient but expensive aid programs." ...At the EU summit starting Thursday, Mr. Blair could return to his original agenda and propose
serious CAP reform in exchange for cuts in the rebate. Not that such a budget would have the slightest chance of being passed. But at least he'd go down fighting for the right principles. http://online.wsj.com/article/SB113442344915720457.html?mod=opinion& ojcontent=otep (subscription required)
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Thursday, December 15, 2005 ~ 10:04 a.m., Dan Mitchell Wrote:
Congressional spending spree continues. The Wall Street Journal properly condemns politicians for squandering millions of dollars as part of a new pork-filled
"emergency" spending bill:
Just when you thought the budget mess on Capitol Hill couldn't get more embarrassing, Congress is now set to sneak $7 billion of spending
to fight the avian flu into an appropriations bill without a penny of offsetting spending cuts. White House and Congressional leaders have apparently concluded that there's nothing that can be cut from the $600
billion-plus Health and Human Services budget. ...It turns out that the Centers for Disease Control (CDC), the agency asking Congress for the
avian flu spending, is also in the final stages of completing a $60 million taxpayer-funded Visitors Center. ...A CDC spokesman promises that
the center will be "a world class destination," with red ants, rats, monkeys, art work and a giant model mosquito, all of which will make
the museum a "must-see place for tourists." ...This giant memorial to Ebola, the West Nile virus and such is one small component of the
CDC's new Taj Mahal of a "campus" in downtown Atlanta. Its cost in the hundreds of millions of dollars rivals some of the glitziest casino
hotels in Las Vegas. The center will have limestone bridges, waterfalls and Japanese gardens and fountains. ...To build Congressional support, the Senate is proposing to name the buildings after Senate
appropriators Tom Harkin and Arlen Specter. But the House has revolted against naming the buildings after sitting members of Congress, so now there is a move afoot to name them after Mother
Teresa and Rosa Parks. What's next, the Mary Magdalene cranberry research center? http://online.wsj.com/article/SB113452116816621810.html?mod=opinion&
ojcontent=otep (subscription required)
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Thursday, December 15, 2005 ~ 9:32 a.m., Dan Mitchell Wrote: GOP corruption. Explaining how "earmarks" are a form of legalized corruption, Rich Lowry's Nationalreview.com article strongly condemns the GOP for becoming
pork addicts. Most discouraging, he compares the sordid deal-making on Capitol Hill with the noble vision that motivated Republicans back in 1994:
The spending process has been so twisted by the Republican majority that it has become inherently dirty. The instruments of this perversion
are "earmarks," special provisions attached to spending bills that direct federal money to specific projects. Earmarks are how Congress diverts
spending to pork-barrel local priorities and to other special interests. This practice has long existed, but Republicans have made it part of the
fabric of their governing. ...The number of firms registered to lobby members on the appropriations committees increased from 1,865 to 3,523 between 2000 and 2004, according to Knight Ridder. ...This is a
corrupting process because it depends on congressmen prioritizing special interests, slipping earmarks into bills with no debate, and getting rewarded for it with campaign contributions. ...It is hard to
imagine a practice or culture more inimical to the spirit of the Republicans who took over Congress in 1994. A decade later, the GOP has embraced the tactics of the corrupt, free-spending Democrats they
overthrew. http://www.nationalreview.com/lowry/lowry200512130836.asp
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Wednesday, December 14, 2005 ~ 11:14 a.m., Dan Mitchell Wrote:
Big success for Romania's flat tax. The evidence for tax reform keeps accumulating. Soon it will be so overwhelming that even American politicians will begin to notice. The Associated Press has a story on how Romania's flat tax is boosting revenue and lowering unemployment. These good results are the natural
consequence of a pro-growth tax system that imposes low tax rates on productive behavior:
The introduction of a flat tax this year has boosted budget revenues, raised people's incomes and reduced unemployment, Prime Minister
Calin Popescu Tariceanu said Sunday. Since Jan. 1, when the government replaced the country's progressive taxation of 18 to 40 percent for individuals with a flat tax of 16 percent, budget revenues
grew by 20 percent compared with the same period last year, Tariceanu said. "These figures show the results are much better than our most
optimistic evaluations," he said... Unemployment fell from 6.2 percent to 5.5 percent, while inflation also fell from 9.3 percent in 2004 to an
estimated 8.5 percent this year. Average income after tax increased from about 600 lei (US$200; euro170) last year to 740 lei (US$250; euro210) per month in September. http://ca.us.biz.yahoo.com/ap/051211/romania_economy.html?.v=1
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Wednesday, December 14, 2005 ~ 10:11 a.m., Dan Mitchell Wrote:
Swiss canton votes for regressive tax system. When left-wingers sometimes complain that the flat tax is "regressive," they are either being stupid or dishonest.
An ultra-pure flat tax would be proportional since every dollar would be taxed at the same rate. And the flat taxes being discussed in Washington actually are mildly
"progressive" since generous family allowances shield the poor from paying any tax. If the left wants something to complain about, they should visit the Swiss Canton of
Obwalden, where citizens just voted for a genuinely regressive tax. As reported by Tax-news.com, the tax rate is 8 percent for those making less than 70,000 francs
and falls to 1 percent for those making more than 300,000 francs. The voters of Obwalden decided that their future would be more prosperous if they could attract
more rich people and create a better climate for wealth creation. Needless to say, this upsets the left, which complains that low-tax Swiss cantons are engaged in a
"race to the bottom." Sensible people, by contrast, see this as further evidence that tax competition promotes lower tax rates and helps control the greed of politicians:
Voters in the small central Swiss canton of Obwalden have approved new laws which will substantially cut income tax for individuals and
corporations... From January 1, corporate tax in Obwalden will be cut to 6.6%, making it the lowest rate in Switzerland. For individuals, those earning up to CHF70,000 will pay 8% (down from 10%); those with
income up to CHF300,000 will pay up to 6%; and those earning more than CHF300,000 will see tax cut to 1% from 2.35%. Property tax will also fall by at least 30%. ...the move is likely to excite opposition ...the
Social Democratic Party has pledged to help coordinate a Europe-wide campaign against what it calls "increasing competition" among
countries seeking to attract the rich and famous, and has warned that a "race to the bottom" on tax will endanger public finances. ...the Swiss
tax system has also raised eyebrows in Brussels. In a letter sent to the Swiss Mission in Brussels in October, the European Union suggested that certain parts of the Swiss corporate tax regime "may be
incompatible" with Switzerland's obligations under the 1972 Free Trade Agreement between Switzerland and the European Union. Guido Jud,
head of corporate tax in canton Zug, told swissinfo recently that he was "surprised" by the EU's viewpoint. "The rules on taxation in
Switzerland have not changed recently so we do not see why, in 2005, there should be suddenly be a problem," he stated. http://www.tax-news.com/asp/story/story.asp?storyname=22049
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Wednesday, December 14, 2005 ~ 9:25 a.m., Dan Mitchell Wrote:
President should admit mistake and repeal Medicare entitlement. Professor
Larry Sabato is one of America's leading commentators on politics, so it is particularly interesting that he thinks Bush would regain some popularity if he got rid
of his horribly expensive Medicare prescription drug entitlement. The economic benefits certainly would be enormous. Sadly, the President has threatened to veto
any effort to rescue America from this costly boondoggle:
Everyone knows you are stubborn and loath to acknowledge any mistake--in part because your many enemies would never let you forget
it. We know you'll never admit any error on Iraq, and there's no chance you'll change course on the tax cuts. So let's choose something that even your strongest supporters in Congress deeply regret: the Medicare
drug benefit. Do you know how many Republican Senators and Representatives have said privately that it is the worst, most regrettable vote of their careers? The drug benefit will add trillions to the national
debt over time; because of its complexity, it is overwhelmingly disliked by the very seniors it is designed to help; and like most government programs, it is guaranteed to become massively more unwieldy and
costly in the future, as new provisions and baubles are added on. Eliminate it, or at the very least, cut it way back by limiting it to the poor. Your gigantic, additional Medicare entitlement underlines the
Bush Administration's reckless overspending. The ocean of red ink you have created will be an enormous black, or, red mark on your legacy in the history books. Why not do something about it while you still can?
All at once, you can please your party, make better policy, and change your image by confessing a big goof. People will be amazed at your display of humility. Sometimes, the best politics is counterintuitive.
http://www.centerforpolitics.org/crystalball/article.php?id=LJS2005112901
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Wednesday, December 14, 2005 ~ 7:46 a.m., Dan Mitchell Wrote:
"Potomac Fever" and fake philanthropy. Chris Edwards of the Cato Institute identifies one of the reasons why there is so much waste of tax dollars in
Washington. Simply stated, politicians get seduced by all the flattery of special interests groups. And since they conveniently forget that they are spending other
people's money, it is very easy to play the role of generous philanthropist. Edwards' Nationalreview.com column concludes that term limits are one of the few ways of
addressing this problem:
The real problem is the pro-spending mindset ingrained in long-time legislators. It's called "Potomac Fever," and it causes members of
Congress to see themselves as philanthropists with unlimited means to solve every problem in society. Potomac Fever is fueled by the thousands of interest groups in Washington that trumpet the benefits of
favored programs. For legislators, spending rewards their egos because they get lauded in the media for their noble public service, they get praised by program beneficiaries, they get toasted at gala dinners in
their honor, and they get buildings and highways named after them. Unfortunately, members of Congress forget that they are spending other people's money. They don't consider the private activities that
would occur if resources weren't redirected to Washington to fund their "philanthropy." They become program advocates, rather than referees
who judge program merits against concerns about tax levels and adherence to the Constitution. http://www.nationalreview.com/comment/edwards200512120833.asp
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Wednesday, December 14, 2005 ~ 7:13 a.m., Dan Mitchell Wrote:
Rich white environmentalists versus poor black children. It is not intentional, to be sure, but the policies of the radical environmental movement are killing millions
of people, mostly children. Africans are the biggest victims. This should be an international scandal. But as John Stossel explains, even the U.S. government is
facilitating needless deaths:
Two to three million people die of malaria every year, Uganda's health minister has said, because the U.S. government is afraid of a chemical
called DDT. The United States does spend your tax dollars trying to fight malaria in Africa, but it won't fund DDT. The money goes for things like mosquito netting over beds (even though not everyone in
Africa even has a bed). The office that dispenses those funds, the Agency for International Development, acknowledges DDT is safe, but it will not spent a penny on it. ...DDT was banned in America after we
started celebrating Earth Day. Environmentalists made a lot of claims then -- I have an amusing clip of an environmentalist exclaiming, "You
are breathing probably the last of the oxygen!" Soon after that the environmentalists mounted their campaign against DDT. The result? A
huge resurgence of malaria, more than 50 million dead, mostly children. "If it's a chemical, it must be bad," said scientist Amir Attaran. "If it's
DDT, it must be awful. And that's fine if you're a rich, white environmentalist. It's not so fine if you're a poor black kid who is about to lose his life from malaria." http://www.townhall.com/opinion/columns/JohnStossel/2005/12/14/178999. html
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Tuesday, December 13, 2005 ~ 9:30 a.m., Dan Mitchell Wrote:
Former Congressman slams GOP's abandonment of Reaganite principles. Writing for the Wall Street Journal, former Congressman Pat Toomey bemoans the
terrible record of today's Republican Party. As Toomey notes, the GOP now seems more interested in being in charge of a bloated public sector than it is in upholding Ronald Reagan's vision of liberty:
After 10 years of controlling Congress, Washington Republicans have an identity crisis. It was Republicans who gave us a farm bill that only a
Soviet central planner could love; a campaign-finance reform bill that expands government's unconstitutional restrictions on speech; a prescription-drug entitlement program that Lyndon Johnson could only
have dreamed of; and a transportation bill with more than 40-times as many pork projects it took to earn Reagan's veto. So, we ask a fair question: Is Reagan's vision of limited government--the fundamental
principle that brought Republicans to power--still part of the Republican identity, or has it been abandoned in favor of the seductive power of controlling unlimited government? http://www.opinionjournal.com/extra/?id=110007668
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Tuesday, December 13, 2005 ~ 9:02 a.m., Dan Mitchell Wrote:
Are British Tories destined to remain a minority party? A Wall Street Journal columnist frets that the new leader of the U.K.'s Conservative Party does not
understand the Thatcherite vision of smaller government and individual freedom. The Tories have been wandering in the wilderness ever since they abandoned
Margaret Thatcher's principles, and it appears that they will continue wandering in the near future. The only hope for the Conservatives is that Tony Blair's likely
successor, Gordon Brown, is a strident left-winger who probably will repeat the mistakes that caused the Labor Party to fall into disrepute during the 1970s and 1980s:
And just in case anyone doubted Mr. Cameron wants today's Conservatives to be different, to "change," to be "compassionate," he
said so -- over and over. "We need to change in order to win. . . . We need to change the way we feel. . . . We need to change the way we
think. . . . We will change the way we behave." Indeed, the only kind of "change" Mr. Cameron didn't seem excited about was "climate
change," which he singled out as a concern in what was mostly a policy-free speech. He accused Mr. Blair's government of not regulating
CO2 enough! As for the kind of policy principles that used to define the Conservative brand -- like, you know, low taxes and limited government -- Mr. Cameron is known be lukewarm at best. ...Things
really started to go bad for them in 1993 when Mrs. Thatcher's successor, John Major, raised taxes twice. It was the British equivalent
of George H.W. Bush's reneging on his "read my lips" pledge, and the Tories never recovered in the polls. ...There's a lesson here for a U.S.
Republican Party that has lately seemed ambivalent, at best, about its Reagan heritage. True, they cut taxes in President Bush's first term, helping spur 10 consecutive quarters of impressive economic growth.
But incredibly, they're having a hard time mustering the votes to make those tax cuts permanent. Meanwhile, far too many Republicans have bought the left's conception of compassion -- spending other people's
money. Witness the 2003 Medicare drug entitlement, which was accompanied by lots of poetic waxing about a kinder, gentler GOP establishing a "permanent Republican majority." Not only didn't the
new entitlement give us a permanent Republican majority, there is some concern that the big-spending GOP might not retain its majority next year. http://online.wsj.com/article/SB113417663841019066.html?mod=opinion& ojcontent=otep
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Tuesday, December 13, 2005 ~ 8:41 a.m., Dan Mitchell Wrote:
Big government means failed government. The President of the American Enterprise Institute explains that the government inevitably fails if it becomes too
large. For all intents and purposes, political and bureaucratic systems are incapable of handling multiple tasks competently. This is why big government is a
double-disaster. The first disaster is that big government means a lot of money being wasted on things the government should not be doing. The second disaster is that it
means that the government is incapable of handling the the things it should be doing. In other words, if we want the government to stop terrorists, the odds of success
are higher if politicians and bureaucrats are not distracted by thousand of less important issues:
...efforts to make government efficient, businesslike, and smoothly growing are eventually self-limiting. Economists call this the problem of
diseconomy of scale. One of the greatest, Ronald Coase, who won the Nobel Prize in 1991, puzzled over why so many studies of government programs found that they were ineffective or actually worsened the
problems they were supposed to ameliorate. He concluded that "an important reason may be that government at the present time is so large that it has reached the stage of negative marginal productivity,
which means that any additional function it takes on will probably result in more harm than good.... If a federal program were established to give financial assistance to Boy Scouts to enable them to help old
ladies cross busy intersections, we could be sure that not all the money would go to Boy Scouts, that some of those they helped would be neither old nor ladies, that part of the program would be devoted to
preventing old ladies from crossing busy intersections, and that many of them would be killed because they would now cross at places where,
unsupervised, they were at least permitted to cross." That's amusing, and also a pretty accurate premonition of the government's Keystone Cops response to Hurricane Katrina in September 2005. The Katrina
aftermath-combining an inept response to a major civil emergency (unquestionably an important government function) with a subsequent, panicky splurge of government spending (aiming essentially to
reconstitute the entire Gulf Coast with federal dollars)-stands as a perfect testament to the predicament of unlimited government. Although the performance of certain federal officials came in for angry
criticism, it's unlikely the performance would have been much different if George C. Marshall and Elihu Root (to take two of the most able government administrators in American history) had been in charge. http://www.taemag.com/issues/articleID.18895/article_detail.asp
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Monday, December 12, 2005 ~ 10:37 a.m., Dan Mitchell Wrote:
Milton Friedman says GOP spending orgy is "disgraceful." Mincing no words, one of America's great economists says he is disgusted by the reckless
big-spending fiscal policy of the Bush White House and Republican Congress. The Washington Times reports:
Economist Milton Friedman, a strong supporter of President Bush's tax cuts, says the past four years of Republican spending increases are
"disgraceful" and a betrayal of the party's principles. "I'm disgusted by it," the winner of the 1976 Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences
told The Washington Times recently. ...Federal spending as a share of the entire economy was 18.4 percent when Mr. Bush took office in 2001. Since then, the government's annual spending levels have grown
by $610 billion or to 20.2 percent of the economy. http://www.washingtontimes.com/national/20051208-121136-2938r.htm
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Monday, December 12, 2005 ~ 10:00 a.m., Dan Mitchell Wrote:
Global warming hysteria beginning to fade. According to the Wall Street Journal, even leftist governments are beginning to back away from the absurd
policies of the Kyoto "climate change" treaty. In part, this is because scientific inquiry is not finding any conclusive link between so-called greenhouse gases and
global temperatures. Moreover, nobody has ever explained why a one-degree increase in temperature would be such a bad thing:
...even as the Montreal crowd treats man-made global warming as established fact, the science behind the long-term forecasts remains
ambiguous and sketchy, while the benefits of "doing something about it" are by no means clear. Consider a few recent developments. In 2003, Canadian researchers Stephen McIntyre and Ross McKitrick
demonstrated that the "hockey-stick" analysis--a key element of global-warming dogma that purports to demonstrate that global temperatures held steady for centuries until rising sharply in the last
100 years--was riddled with "collation errors, unjustifiable truncation or extrapolation of source data, obsolete data," and so on. The
Canadians found that the Medieval warm period had indeed occurred, suggesting that periods of warming and cooling were natural trends unrelated to the number of SUVs on the road. ...More recently,
scientists have been grappling with data distortions caused by the 1991 eruption of Mount Pinatubo in the Philippines. That eruption initially
caused ocean temperatures to cool; now temperatures are rising as the "Pinatubo Effect" unwinds and distorts the long-term trend data.
Scientists have also noted weakenings in Atlantic currents that move cold waters south and warm waters north, leading to predictions that Britain may experience Siberia-like temperatures in the coming
decades. Whatever else that is, it isn't "warming." ...given the costly and fraudulent scares we have just lived through--mad-cow disease,
genetically modified foods--the End Is Nigh crowd should be held to a higher standard of proof than it has been before. The needs of the world's poor and sick are too pressing to squander limited economic
resources on what could be another false alarm. http://www.opinionjournal.com/weekend/hottopic/?id=110007665
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Monday, December 12, 2005 ~ 8:25 a.m., Dan Mitchell Wrote:
Republicans pushing more subsidies for the insurance industry. After 9-11, the GOP rushed to make taxpayers liable for some of the insurance costs
associated with terrorist attack. Not surprisingly, they ignored sound insurance principles. But the sunset of the legislation creates an opportunity to move in the
right direction - ideally by letting the legislation expire. But Republicans (at least in the House) see this as an opportunity to move policy further in the wrong direction. Paul Gessing of the National Taxpayers Union explains:
...most Americans are probably unaware that Congress may soon pass legislation that could actually increase the burden on taxpayers, putting
them on the hook for billions of dollars in the event of a future terrorist attack. ...Originally conceived as a "temporary" bridge to promote the
creation of a private market for terrorism insurance, the Terrorism Risk Insurance Act (TRIA) was intended to be a three-year program - set to
expire at the end of this year... the insurance industry has managed to convince House Financial Services Chairman Michael Oxley (R., Ohio), House leadership, and a variety of advocacy groups that continued
federal subsidies are essential. ...The House bill...is an abomination and should be rejected out-of-hand. This legislation does little to reduce taxpayer exposure to terrorism losses and would actually increase
payouts for larger terrorist attacks by having the program pay for 95 percent of all losses above $40 billion instead of the 90 percent called
for in current law. ...Like so many other federal programs, when TRIA was created it was described by its congressional advocates as a limited expansion of government's power into the marketplace. It was clear
then and is even clearer now that some in Congress intend terrorism reinsurance to be only the first government intrusion. http://www.nationalreview.com/nrof_comment/gessing200512070858.asp
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Sunday, December 11, 2005 ~ 11:38 a.m., Dan Mitchell Wrote: French welfare fraud. Who says the French are lazy and inefficient? According to this report from the Wall Street Journal, many "entrepreneurs" have figured out
clever ways of bilking France's huge welfare state. The system is so upside-down that clever people can "earn" more money mooching off the government than they
can by joining the productive sector of the economy. No wonder France is economically stagnant, with double-digit unemployment:
According to a report in Le Monde Wednesday, the courts are investigating 17 organized groups who've used the latest technology to
swindle millions in illegal dole payments since 1998. In all, the system has lost something between EUR250 million and EUR4 billion due to fraud since 1998. That's hardly small change for a program already
EUR14 billion in the red. In one case, a French national of Pakistani origin reportedly sold "kits Assedic" -- named for the agency that manages unemployment insurance -- that enabled 55 people, mostly
immigrants, to claim benefits from losing jobs at a fictional small business. The kits went for up to EUR3,800 each. In another case, the suspect allegedly created 200 shell companies to fool Assedic into
paying out EUR10 million to about 500 of his "clients."...The jobless, who account for a tenth of the French workforce, receive 57.4% to
75% of their last salary, paid monthly for up to four years, depending on seniority. So the incentives to commit fraud are pretty clear. Perhaps the bigger scandal is that the incentives to find a new job aren't.
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB113407950001017706.html?mod=opinion& ojcontent=otep (subscription required)
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Sunday, December 11, 2005 ~ 11:11 a.m., Dan Mitchell Wrote:
George Will condemns GOP's latest new entitlement scheme. In a move that must have the Founding Fathers spinning in their graves, the House and Senate have
both passed legislation to subsidize digital TV. Compared to the Medicare entitlement, the money is minor. But as a matter of moral principles, this may be
even worse. One can only wonder whether there is anything that today's Republicans do not feel is a legitimate function of the federal government:
The Senate has passed -- and so has the House, with differences -- an entitlement to digital television. If this filigree on the welfare state
becomes law, everyone who owns old analog television sets -- everyone from your Aunt Emma in her wee apartment to the millionaire in the neighborhood McMansion who has such sets in the maid's room and the
guest house -- will get subsidies to pay for making those sets capable of receiving digital signals. ...this story illustrates the timeless truth that no
matter how deeply you distrust the government's judgment, you are too trusting. ...today's up-to-date conservatism does not stand idly by expecting people to actually pursue happiness on their own. Hence the
new entitlement from Congress to help all Americans acquire converter boxes to put on top of old analog sets, making the sets able to receive digital programming. ...The $990 million House version of this
entitlement -- call it ``No Couch Potato Left Behind'' -- is (relatively) parsimonious: Consumers would get vouchers worth only $40, and would be restricted to a measly two vouchers per household. The
Senate's more spacious entitlement would pay for most of the cost -- $50 to $60 -- of the converter boxes. But there is Republican rigor in this: Consumers would be required to pay $10. That is the conservatism
in compassionate conservatism. http://www.townhall.com/opinion/columns/georgewill/2005/12/08/178217.ht ml
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Saturday, December 10, 2005 ~ 9:45 a.m., Dan Mitchell Wrote:
Why are Republicans subsidizing their enemies? Politicians can be faulted for wasting tax money of failed government programs, and Republicans certainly have
shown they are very skilled when it comes to squandering other people's money. But this is not a big surprise. It takes solid principles and an extremely strong
character to avoid the corruption of Washington. What is surprising, however, is that Republicans subsidize organizations that actively seek to undermine the GOP. An article in Human Events, for instance, outlines how the AARP receives more
than $80 million per year (about twice the budget of the Heritage Foundation - all of which comes from private sources) from taxpayers:
Starting in January 2005, AARP sent mass mailings to its members, spent $5 million on full-page advertisements in 50 major newspapers,
and another $5 million on print advertising to foment opposition to the Bush reform plan. ...Mobilizing its full-time staff of 1,800 and a network
of 300,000 volunteers, AARP sent activists to dozens of congressional town hall meetings and generated more than 460,000 phone calls to Congress complaining about the private account plan. ...The defeat of
private accounts is perhaps the most dramatic example of AARP's commitment to liberal activism. But it is hardly the first time. AARP opposed tax cuts in both the Reagan and Bush administrations. In 1991,
it worked to defeat the nomination of Clarence Thomas to the U.S. Supreme Court. ...the fact that AARP pursues its political agenda using federal dollars especially angers taxpayers, and not just those who have
problems with its politics. The AARP 2004 annual report showed that ...$83 million came from the federal government through a variety of grants. Charlie Jarvis, Chairman and CEO of USA Next, estimates that
since 1989, "AARP appears to have taken over a billion dollars in taxpayer money in the form of federal grants." ...It is outrageous that
taxpayers are being used to advance AARP's liberal agenda to expand government and thwart Social Security reform. Even though AARP routinely generates nearly $900 million annually, it receives more than
$80 million in federal funding each year and, cumulatively, has probably received more than $1 billion over the last 16 years. The time is long overdue to cut off federal subsidies to AARP and end the unjust
practice of publicly funding a highly partisan and controversial interest group. http://www.humaneventsonline.com/article.php?id=10731
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Saturday, December 10, 2005 ~ 8:15 a.m., Dan Mitchell Wrote:
Grade inflation used to boost wasteful foreign aid. The track record of foreign aid is one of failure. In most cases, the money is either stolen or it gets used to prop
up bigger government. So it was disappointing that the Bush Administration joined with other nations to support a new foreign aid scheme based on debt forgiveness.
But supposedly this new effort is going to be less wasteful since corrupt governments are not eligible. In a less-than-shocking development, the United
Nations is promoting a new grading system that gives "good" or "average" grades to some of the world's worst kleptocracies. The Wall Street Journal reports:
Recall that the G-7 leaders who gathered in Scotland last July spent most of their time on African poverty. They decided to forgive $50
billion in bad debts to poor nations and to double global aid to the poorest states -- mostly African -- by $50 billion a year by 2010 (and to
$150 billion a year by 2015). To allay fears that these billions would wind up enriching another generation of crooked politicians and bureaucrats, a string was attached: Governments specializing in graft
would be barred from new disbursements. ...Most of Africa would be automatically disqualified under any system that screens for corruption, as both the World Bank's governance indicators and Transparency
International's annual index demonstrate. ...the Columbia University economist devised a new rating system to measure corruption in which
"African nations are effectively compared mostly to each other." ...Call this the Lake Wobegon effect for development: Most African countries
score impressively under Mr. Sachs's standards. Of the 33 countries surveyed, 26 earn anti-corruption Sachs rankings of "good" or
"average." Mr. Lerrick notes, however, that the equivalent rankings by the World Bank of the same 33 are "below average" (nine), "poor" (12)
or "very poor" (12). Transparency International, which ranks most, gives them grades of "poor" or "very poor." All this matters because
Mr. Sachs is also the director of the U.N. Millennium Project, and his favorable ratings for Africa are the intellectual muscle behind a recent
report for the U.N. secretary general on why Africa qualifies for new foreign aid. http://online.wsj.com/article/SB113409543784618070.html?mod=opinion&
ojcontent=otep (subscription required)
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Saturday, December 10, 2005 ~ 7:37 a.m., Dan Mitchell Wrote:
Limousine leftie pushes preschool scheme that will make California even more like France. There is something rather odd about millionaire leftists pushing
policies that will hurt the poor, but that is exactly what will happen if a Hollywood-instigated referendum in approved in California. It would boost the top
tax rate by 19 percent while simultaneously imposing regulations that will make it more difficult for low-income women to set up child care operations. As the Wall Street Journal points out, the scheme extends the failed government school system to the preschool level:
Movie-director-turned-child-advocate Rob Reiner recently acquired a million signatures to put his Preschool for All initiative on the
California ballot next June, his second attempt to launch a "universal" preschool program. The initiative would impose a 1.7% income tax on
couples making over $800,000 a year ($400,000 for individuals) to offer three hours of free preschool for all the state's 4-year-olds. ...the
people most dreading Mr. Reiner's latest foray are not the super-rich, who would no doubt find ways to dodge -- by moving out of the state if
necessary -- what would effectively be a 19% increase in their tax rate. The real victims would be low- to middle-income women who run nearly all private early-care centers that comprise 70% of California's
child-care industry. The onerous credentialing requirements and union mandates that the initiative would trigger would devastate the industry's entrepreneurs without improving instruction one iota. ...the
most powerful evidence that Mr. Reiner's requirements would, if anything, hurt rather than help California's kids is California's K-12 public school system itself. After all, it is run by teachers with precisely
the kind of fancy education degrees drawing union wages that Mr. Reiner wants in preschools. California's fourth graders' reading and math scores are 47th among the 50 states on national tests.
Furthermore, a study by the Rand Corporation this year found California's children trailing on every objective measurement of student achievement -- even after controlling for its disproportionate number of
low-income, minority kids. http://online.wsj.com/article/SB113400678561116975.html?mod=opinion&
ojcontent=otep (subscription required)
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Friday, December 9, 2005 ~ 4:23 p.m., Dan Mitchell Wrote:
Left-wing columnist stumbles into the truth. Michael Kinsley does not write many sensible columns, especially when analyzing policy issues. But his Slate
column on the moral corruption of the Republican Party is painfully accurate. He accurately describes how the GOP has degenerated from Reagan, who waged a
principled fight to control statism, to the present-day spendaholics at both ends of Pennsylvania Avenue:
It used to be said that the moral arc of a Washington career could be divided into four parts: idealism, pragmatism, ambition, and
corruption. You arrive with a passion for a cause, determined to challenge the system. Then you learn to work for your cause within the system. Then rising in the system becomes your cause. Then finally you
exploit the system-your connections in it, and your understanding of it-for personal profit. ...you can now trace the traditional moral arc in
the life of conservative-dominated Washington itself, which began with Ronald Reagan's inauguration and marks its 25th anniversary in January. Reagan and company arrived to tear down the government
and make Washington irrelevant. Now the airport and a giant warehouse of bureaucrats are named after him. ...By the 20th anniversary of their arrival...the conservatives had lost any stomach for
tearing down the government. George W. Bush's "compassionate conservatism" was more like an apology than an ideology. ...Perhaps conceding more than he intended, former Democratic Sen. John
Breaux, now on K Street, told the New York Times that a member of Congress will be swayed more by 2,000 letters from constituents on some issue than by anything a lobbyist can offer. I guess if it's a lobbyist
versus 1,900 constituents, it's too bad for the constituents. http://www.slate.com/id/2131370/
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Friday, December 9, 2005 ~ 11:05 a.m., Dan Mitchell Wrote:
Time to junk the new Medicare entitlement. John Goodman of the National Center for Policy Analysis suggests in the Wall Street Journal that the staggeringly
expensive prescription drug program be repealed. The big spenders and political hacks in the White House naturally oppose this idea - which shows that this is a good proposal:
Seniors don't understand the options. The government instructions contain mistakes. Taxpayers suspect they're going to get soaked. So
why not junk the new Medicare prescription drug program before it kicks in on Jan. 1? Throw it out kit and caboodle, go back to the drawing board, and start all over. In the White House, this idea is
considered heresy. ...But gradually something is beginning to dawn on a lot of Washington insiders, something they didn't understand when the program was enacted two years ago. We are about to launch an
enormously expensive entitlement program and no one has any idea how we are going to pay for it. ...In fact, the program is being phased in for the express purpose of making the first 10 years' costs deceptively
low. What's scary are the long-term numbers. Unlike Social Security and traditional Medicare, there are no dedicated tax revenues for this benefit, so every dollar of spending (net of premiums) is unfunded. And
the sum total of these unfunded liabilities for the next 75 years is more than twice the size of the unfunded liability of Social Security! http://online.wsj.com/article/SB113384041867614875.html?mod=opinion& ojcontent=otep (subscription required)
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Thursday, December 8, 2005 ~ 10:15 a.m., Dan Mitchell Wrote:
Walter Williams brings common sense to the debate about energy prices. Falling gas prices have reduced the danger of foolish political decisions, but it is
nonetheless important to review the dangers of price controls. Walter Williams does an excellent job of comparing the market's efficient response to recent energy
supply disruptions with the government's horrible job of mucking up energy markets in the 1970s. Williams also directs readers to an excellent article about price controls at the Mises Institute website:
In the wake of the spike in fuel prices, many Americans demand that politicians do something. You can bet the rent money that whatever
politicians do will end up harming consumers. Despite a long history of their economic calamity, some Americans and politicians are calling for
price controls or, what amounts to the same thing, anti price-gouging legislation. As Professor Thomas DiLorenzo points out in "Four Thousand Years of Price Control" (www.mises.org/story/1962), price controls have produced calamities wherever and whenever they've been
tried. ...Think back to the gasoline price controls during the 1970s. The price controls caused shortages. To deal with the shortages, restrictions
were imposed on purchases. Then national highway speed limits were enacted. Then there were more calls for smaller and less crashworthy cars. With the recent gasoline supply shocks, we didn't experience the
shortages, long lines and closed gas stations seen during the 1970s. Why? Prices were allowed to perform their allocative function -- get people to use less gas and get suppliers to supply more. http://www.townhall.com/opinion/columns/walterwilliams/2005/12/07/17804 3.html
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Thursday, December 8, 2005 ~ 8:47 a.m., Dan Mitchell Wrote:
Greenspan warns against high taxes and exploding entitlements. Alan Greenspan's status as the arbiter of economic policy maker is a bit overstated, but
he usually says the right thing so long as it does not require him to stray too far from the conventional wisdom. These tendencies were on display during a recent speech,
when he was careful not to rule out any tax increase, but he did state that big tax hikes would cripple economic performance. As such, as the Wall Street Journal notes, Greenspan's main message to politicians is to control the growth of spending:
Mr. Greenspan did focus on government deficits in his remarks to the Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia Policy Forum. But it was not the
current $300 billion budget deficit he was mostly concerned about. It is the much larger problem of entitlements, specifically benefits promised
under Social Security and Medicare. And that deficit is huge -- more than $30 trillion over the next 75 years. ..."However," he added, "tax
increases of sufficient dimension to deal with our looming fiscal problems arguably pose significant risks to economic growth and the
revenue base." Those risks are great enough "to warrant aiming, if at all possible, to close the fiscal gap primarily, if not wholly, from the
outlay side." Translated from the Greenspan-ese: Cut spending. ...Mr. Greenspan's language was typically measured, but his point was perfectly clear: Our government has made promises it cannot meet.
Without changes in Congressional spending or entitlement reform -- or both -- those promises will eventually be broken. http://online.wsj.com/article/SB113392550644515943.html?mod=opinion& ojcontent=otep (subscription required)
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Wednesday, December 7, 2005 ~ 2:37 p.m., Andrew Quinlan Wrote:
OECD attacks sovereignty of U.S. states and wants Washington to force changes to state corporate law. CF&P, joined by nine of the country's leading
think tanks, condemned the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) for attacking America's federal system. The groups also
expressed their concern that the Treasury Department delegation at the Melbourne Global Tax Forum acquiesced to the attack. Excerpts from the Center's press
statement:
In a report issued late last month following the OECD's Global Tax Forum in Melbourne, Australia, the Paris-based bureaucracy reiterated
its opposition to market-friendly incorporation laws and in a swipe at America urged nations with federal systems to pressure "political
subdivisions" into changing their policies in order to help hinder the flow of capital from high-tax nations.
Andrew Quinlan [CF&P]: "
It is very disappointing that the Treasury bureaucrats at the meeting allowed this attack on America's Constitutional system."
Daniel
Mitchell [Heritage Foundation]: "
If [Delaware, Nevada, Florida, Wyoming and Montana] are attracting business from Europe's high-tax
welfare states, then nations such as France and Germany should lower the burden of government rather than using the OECD as a vehicle to attack more successful jurisdictions."
Veronique de Rugy [AEI]: "
Ironically, the OECD is attacking U.S. policies, yet these are the same policies that led the World Bank to give America a very high
grade in its widely acclaimed publication, Doing Business in 2006."
Grover Norquist [ATR]: "It is quite disappointing that the Treasury Department bureaucrats at the Melbourne meeting did not defend U.S. interests."
Dave Keene [ACU]: "The competitive vibrancy of US politics and economics is in large measure traceable to the federal
system established by the founders that European centralizers find so repugnant."
John Berthoud [NTU]: "Federalism is the backbone of
America, and America's state-based system for company chartering is successful precisely because of jurisdictional competition."
Matt Kibbe [FreedomWorks]: "Our Founding Fathers wanted limited
government, which is one reason they set up a federal system in the Constitution. That system has worked well for America, in part because states must compete with each other."
Pat Toomey [Club for Growth]: "The President's appointees at the Treasury Department should override the misguided actions of the bureaucrats who let us
down at the OECD's anti-tax competition meeting in Melbourne."
Karen Kerrigan [SBE Council]: "
The OECD's campaign to prop up
Europe's welfare states is a threat to good tax policy and also poses grave risks for America's vibrant small business sector."
Tom Giovanetti [IPI]: "
Congress should quickly act to eliminate US
subsidies for the OECD." http://www.freedomandprosperity.org/press/p12-06-05/p12-06-05.shtml
Link to this Blog Entry
Wednesday, December 7, 2005 ~ 12:57 p.m., Dan Mitchell Wrote:
Term limits for congressional committees. Kevin Hassett of the American Enterprise Institute writes that the bribery scandal that led to the resignation of
Congressman Cunningham is just the tip of the iceberg. Spending bills are filled with unjustified provisions - pork items that are completely undesirable even if the
bribery is in a legal form such as campaign contributions. One easy solution would be to randomly assign members to committees, with no member serving on any
committee for more than two years. As Hassett explains, this would end the culture of political corruption on the Appropriations Committee:
The case of corrupt former Congressman Randall ``Duke'' Cunningham sheds troubling light on something that has been largely overlooked:
how so many questionable money provisions make it into law. Republicans have been quick to distance themselves from Cunningham, but they have paid insufficient attention to the process that created him,
and have taken no real steps to remedy the obvious problem. ...even though many of them are surely innocent of any wrongdoing, everyone on the House appropriations committee of both parties should be fired.
They all contributed to an environment in which Cunningham could operate undetected, probably because many of them are doing similar favors, even if they are careful to do it legally. ...the new appropriations
committee should consist of a random selection of House members who agree to serve for only two years. The possibility for corruption in appropriating money is so strong that severe measures must be taken to
protect the integrity of the process. Corruption takes years to develop. Limited terms on the appropriations panel should stop it in its tracks. http://www.aei.org/publications/pubID.23527/pub_detail.asp
Link to this Blog Entry
Wednesday, December 7, 2005 ~ 9:32 a.m., Dan Mitchell Wrote:
Soak the rich with lower tax rates. Bruce Bartlett's Townhall.com column shows
that tax revenues rose in both the U.S. and U.K. when top tax rates were lowered under Reagan and Thatcher. As Bartlett explains, there are many left-wingers who
hate success so much that they want to impose very high tax rates - even if it means they get less tax revenue:
...in 1980, when the top statutory income tax rate went up to 70 percent, the share of income taxes paid by the top 1 percent of
taxpayers was just 19.3 percent. After Ronald Reagan's tax cut of 1981, which reduced the top rate to 50 percent -- a massive give-away to the
wealthy according to those on the left -- the percentage of income taxes paid by the top 1 percent rose steadily. By 1986, the top 1 percent's
share of all federal income taxes rose to 25.7 percent. That year, the top statutory tax rate was further cut to 28 percent -- another huge-give-away, we were told. Yet the share of income taxes paid by the
top 1 percent continued to rise. By 1992, it was up to 27.5 percent. ...according to Her Majesty's Revenue and Customs, the share of total income taxes paid by the top 1 percent of taxpayers was 11 percent in
the United Kingdom in 1979, when the top income tax rate was 83 percent. Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher cut that rate to 60 percent, and by 1987 the share of income taxes paid by the top 1 percent had
risen to 14 percent. The top rate was cut again to 40 percent, where it still stands, and the share of income taxes paid by the top 1 percent
continued rising to a current level of 21 percent. ...At some point, those on the left must decide what really matters to them -- the appearance of
soaking the rich by imposing high statutory tax rates that may cause actual tax payments by the wealthy to fall, or lower rates that may bring in more revenue that can pay for government programs to aid the
poor? Sadly, the left nearly always votes for appearances over reality, favoring high rates that bring in little revenue even when lower rates would bring in more. http://www.townhall.com/opinion/columns/brucebartlett/2005/12/06/177875 .html
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Wednesday, December 7, 2005 ~ 9:02 a.m., Dan Mitchell Wrote:
Luxembourg official opposes tax harmonization. French and German politicians got more bad news when the head of Luxembourg's Central Bank condemned tax harmonization. As reported by Tax-news.com, he specifically explained that monetary union does not require identical taxes (much as America's
single currency does not require all states to have identical taxes). This is a further sign that French and German officials are unlikely to succeed in their efforts to
thwart tax competition. It also is a sign that Luxembourg officials finally are defending their self-interest. Luxembourg is one of the world's most successful tax
havens, using bank secrecy to attract huge amounts of capital from their over-taxed European neighbors. Yet because the nation is a typical welfare state, the political
class has stayed out of the raging debate in Europe between tax harmonization and tax competition:
Luxembourg's Central Bank Governor Yves Mersch, stated last week that tax harmonisation is not an essential component of European
Monetary Union, and that member states should be allowed to retain control of their own fiscal policies in order to counteract local inflation.
...Mersch went on to observe that there "is no connection" between European Monetary Union and tax harmonisation, and that the latter concept represents one step beyond the former one. ...Mersch also
disputed Franco-German fears of 'fiscal dumping' by the new member states in Eastern Europe, which have been sharply cutting company tax rates in order to attract foreign investment, arguing that businesses
were more concerned with the overall stability of a country's fiscal system. http://www.tax-news.com/asp/story/story_open.asp?storyname=21972
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Wednesday, December 7, 2005 ~ 7:41 a.m., Dan Mitchell Wrote:
Milton Friedman calls for school choice in New Orleans. Pointing out that the government's school monopoly is based on the same model as the economies of former communist nations, Milton Friedman calls for radical school choice in New Orleans. Louisiana officials have taken a small step in the right direction by looking
at charter schools, but that is just the first step on a long journey. Vouchers are the only way of ensuring better education because they are the only way of creating market forces:
New Orleans schools were failing for the same reason that schools are failing in other large cities, because the schools are owned and operated
by the government. Government decides what is to be produced and who is to consume its products, generally assigning students to schools by their residence. The only recourse of dissatisfied parents is to change
their residence or give up the government subsidy and pay for their children's schooling twice, once in taxes and once in tuition. This top-down organization works no better in the U.S. than it did in the
Soviet Union or East Germany. ...Louisiana, which has taken over the New Orleans school system, should take this opportunity to empower the consumers, i.e., the students, by providing parents with vouchers of
substantial size, say three-quarters of per-pupil spending in government schools, usable only for educational expenses. Parents would then be
free to choose the schooling they considered best for their children. This would introduce competition, which is missing from the present system.
...To make competition effective, Louisiana should provide a favorable climate for new entrants, whether they be parochial, non-profit or for-profit. As part of doing so it should make clear that the vouchers
are not an emergency expedient that will be terminated once the emergency is over, but are a permanent reform. ...If, by a political miracle, Louisiana could overcome the opposition of the unions and
enact universal vouchers, it would not only serve itself, it would also render a service to the rest of the country by providing a large scale example of what the market can do for education when permitted to
operate. http://online.wsj.com/article/SB113374845791113764.html?mod=opinion& ojcontent=otep (subscription required)
Link to this Blog Entry
Tuesday, December 6, 2005 ~ 2:09 p.m., Dan Mitchell Wrote:
The alternative minimum tax is the left's problem. The AMT is a horrible tax, but - in a sign of poetic justice - one that primarily hits left-wing voters in left-wing
states. This is causing statist politicians like Hillary Clinton and Charlie Rangel to espouse tax cuts (albeit only the AMT). The Wall Street Journal makes the excellent point that Republicans should let the AMT fester in order to compel
Democrats to support broader tax reform. As the Journal explains, the President's Tax Reform Panel made a mistake by focusing on AMT repeal. Combined with
another bad decision (to rely on static revenue estimating), this meant that the bulk of the revenue gained by closing loopholes was used to repeal the AMT rather than for pro-growth reforms such as lower tax rates:
Liberals designed the AMT back in 1969, ostensibly to snare (literally) 21 millionaires who managed to pay no income tax at all in 1967. But
as incomes and deductions have increased over the years, the AMT has gradually hit more and more taxpayers, especially the upper-middle-class in such high tax states as New York, New Jersey and
California. It's a liberal tax that now hits liberal states especially hard. Which explains why blue state Democrats are suddenly demanding that
GOP tax writers include AMT relief for 2006 as part of the tax package that is now in conference. ...Never mind that AMT relief will cost the
Treasury some $29 billion, according to the static-revenue estimate of the Joint Tax Committee. Somehow all that outrage by Democrats
about "the deficit" seems to vanish when their voters are getting the tax relief. ...There's a larger lesson here for the tax reform debate,
assuming we ever have one. For all of its sins, the AMT is the main carrot that Republicans have to induce Democrats to consider supporting lower tax rates. If Republicans lead by proposing to
eliminate the AMT, Democrats will pocket that concession and oppose everything else. Far better to let the class-war Frankenstein that is the AMT terrorize the liberal countryside until Democrats decide to
cooperate. The recent report of the President's Tax Reform Commission fell into the trap of proposing to eliminate the AMT first. http://online.wsj.com/article/SB113373927806713620.html?mod=opinion& ojcontent=otep (subscription required)
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Tuesday, December 6, 2005 ~ 12:56 p.m., Dan Mitchell Wrote:
Canadian Conservatives call for tax cuts. With a national election coming up, Canada's Conservative Party has called for a two percentage point reduction in the
country's value-added tax (known as the GST). This is the good news. The bad news is that the there would be a much bigger bang-for-the-buck if Canada instead
lowered tax rates on personal and corporate income. This is because lower marginal tax rates on productive behavior increase incentives to work, save, and
invest. Lower tax rates on consumption also have some pro-growth impact (since the purpose of earning income is to enjoy consumption), but the impact is smaller.
But the perfect should not be the enemy of the good. Politicians rarely call for lower taxes, so Canadians should be glad that the discussion if focusing on how to cut taxes rather than how to raise them. Tax-news.com reports:
Stephen Harper, leader of Canada's Conservative Party, has announced that a new Conservative government will seek to cut the
Goods and Services Tax from seven per cent to five per cent within five years of coming to power. "Mainstream Canadians - hardworking people who pay their taxes and play by the rules - need a new
government that will put their interests ahead of self-interest," Mr. Harper stated last Thursday. "We will start by reducing taxes for all,"
he added. ...The Conservatives are pledging to immediately cut the GST to six per cent, then reducing the tax further, to five per cent within five
years. The party claims that this will save ordinary taxpayers C$4.5 billion, with more savings to come. http://www.tax-news.com/asp/story/story_open.asp?storyname=21963
Link to this Blog Entry
Tuesday, December 6, 2005 ~ 9:28 a.m., Dan Mitchell Wrote:
Louisiana takeover of New Orleans schools could trigger education reform. There is no substitute for school choice. When parents have the ability to pick
schools for their children (just as they pick where to live and what food to buy), market forces dominate. This will mean higher standards and better education.
There are some interim steps, though, that could improve the failed government school monopoly. In Louisiana, for instance, the state recently took over the corrupt
and incompetent New Orleans school system and will allow charter schools. This is a long way from school choice, but it should enable schools to escape some of the
awful policies of teacher unions and school district bureaucracies. But there is a caveat. The Wall Street Journal explains that it is critically important not to let
special interests control the creation of charter schools:
...the state plans to turn a significant number of the city's underperforming schools over to universities and foundations to reopen
as charters. Change was way overdue, to put it mildly. Some 90% of the city's 117 public schools were performing below the state average, and
68 of the state's 170 failing schools are located in Orleans Parish. Not that this abysmal record stopped the Louisiana Federation of Teachers and its local affiliate, the United Teachers of New Orleans, from
vehemently opposing the state action. ...Charter schools, which are public schools permitted to operate outside of the control of local school boards, are ideal for New Orleans, where more than 40% of new
teachers quit within three years. Unburdened by union work rules, charter school parents and teachers have more control over the learning environment and freedom to try new methods and curriculums
when old ones aren't working. Teachers can earn merit pay, for example, and the academic school year can run longer than the state minimum, if that's what it takes to teach the mostly poor and minority
kids who were attending the city's worst schools. ...As things stand, the chartering authorities in Louisiana are the local school districts and the
state Board of Education, which aren't fans of school choice. The best course of action for the state would be to create an independent chartering board comprised of individuals open to new ways of serving
students and equipped to approve and monitor these innovative schools. So while Louisiana lawmakers should be commended for moving in the right direction on education, let's hope they realize there's
more work to be done. http://online.wsj.com/article/SB113348536028911943.html?mod=opinion& ojcontent=otep (subscription required)
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Monday, December 5, 2005 ~ 8:37 a.m., Dan Mitchell Wrote:
Swiss leftists want to undermine tax competition. Switzerland is one of the world's most astute practitioners of tax competition. Not only does it have strong
privacy laws, which have attracted $trillions from around the world, but it also attracts rich people by offering special tax low tax rates. In the spirit of self-hatred,
Swiss socialists think this is an unfair policy since foreign governments are deprived of tax revenue. According to Tax-news.com, the Social Democrats want to work
with other left-wing European political parties in a war against tax competition for productive labor:
The Swiss Social Democratic Party, one of the four parties in the coalition government, is taking a position against tax breaks for
wealthy foreigners at a meeting of European centre-left parties in Brussels, Swissinfo has reported According to the article, the party has stated that it wants to help coordinate a Europe-wide campaign against
what it calls "increasing competition" among countries seeking to attract the rich and famous. ...It is estimated that around 3,000 wealthy
foreigners are currently benefiting from fiscal incentives. Senior party official Matthias Manz told Swissinfo that ... "The problem is... that
exaggerated tax competition is a danger for healthy public finances." http://www.tax-news.com/asp/story/story.asp?storyname=21959
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Monday, December 5, 2005 ~ 7:59 a.m., Dan Mitchell Wrote:
Euro-crats continue corporate tax harmonization drive. The European Commission apparently thinks the solution to slow growth and high unemployment
is higher taxes. This sounds insane, but the bureaucrats in Brussels are moving forward with plans to harmonize the corporate tax base (the definition of taxable
income). By itself, this is not an awful proposal - particularly since countries are not obliged to participate. But there is no doubt that a harmonized corporate tax base is
a first step toward a harmonized corporate tax rate, and that will mean higher taxes and a less competitive Europe. Tax-news.com reports:
A European Commission spokeswomen stated on Wednesday that the European Parliament's approval in principle of a proposal to harmonise
the European company tax base will greatly increase its chances of eventually becoming EU law. ...The UK, Ireland, the Czech Republic, Estonia and Slovakia are opposed to any move towards corporate tax
harmonisation. However, Kovacs has indicated that the Commission will forge ahead with its plans to complete legislation towards a single corporate tax base by 2009 regardless, with these countries left out of
the scheme. http://www.tax-news.com/asp/story/story_open.asp?storyname=21952
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Monday, December 5, 2005 ~ 7:13 a.m., Dan Mitchell Wrote:
Republicans are sell-outs, not crooks. Tony Snow's Townhall.com column explains that the GOP big sin is not the occasional corrupt Congressman. Instead,
the problem is that most of the Party has abandoned its principles. Instead of fighting to maximize freedom, most Republicans today try to steer as much money
as they can to bureaucracies and special interest groups. What makes this particularly disgusting is that many of them privately admit they are doing the wrong thing:
The Republican Party in Washington is in trouble not because it's overrun by crooks, but because it's packed with cowards -- and has
degenerated into a caricature of the party that swept to power 11 years ago promising to take on the federal bureaucracy and liberate the creative genius of American society. ...Within months of seizing power
in 1995, Republicans began backing away from Big Ideas, from tort reform to the necessary overhaul of the Social Security system. ...Gone was the Reaganite breadth of vision, and in its place stood the musty
idol of Incumbency. ...Bush insiders even began boasting about "big government" conservatism -- oblivious to the fact that big government
does not conserve or preserve; it crushes and digests, devouring institutions that challenge its supremacy. ...When House Speaker Denny Hastert broke arms to secure votes for a pork-packed highway bill,
calling the legislation a "jobs bill," it was an embarrassment. When the president signed a campaign-finance bill he called unconstitutional, he seemed to lack not only conviction, but vision. http://www.townhall.com/opinion/columns/tonysnow/2005/12/03/177618.ht ml
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Sunday, December 4, 2005 ~ 2:31 p.m., Dan Mitchell Wrote: Random thoughts from Tom Sowell. As usual, the "random thoughts" column by Tom Sowell has a couple of insightful passages. His comment about the market
dominance and high earnings of Tiger Woods is particularly appropriate given the silly demagoguery against oil companies. It also is refreshing to be reminded about
Margaret Thatcher's leadership - though it makes today's Republicans look even more pathetic:
Who would have dreamed that "Merry Christmas" would become a controversial phrase? But increasingly schools and other institutions
avoid it like the plague, in order to be politically correct. ...We are so much more rational about sports than we are about politics. No one
considers it "unfair" that Tiger Woods does so much better than the average golfer, or resents him for it, or accuses him of "gouging" when
he collects big bucks. ...British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher gave the best definition of "consensus": Lack of leadership. http://www.townhall.com/opinion/columns/thomassowell/2005/11/29/17714 1.html
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Saturday, December 3, 2005 ~ 11:22 a.m., Dan Mitchell Wrote:
Freedom of association is best way to handle smoking. Politicians seem to think that they should have the right to impose their views on society. Yet this leads
to a one-size-fits-all approach that restricts the freedom of political minorities. In the case of tobacco smoke, John Stossel notes that he has the freedom to patronize
restaurants based on any criterion - including the fact that he does not like secondhand smoke. But he also says that smokers should have the same right. In a
free society, markets will create an appropriate mix of establishments that permit smoking and those that do not:
If I don't like secondhand smoke -- and I don't -- I can choose to go to restaurants that don't have smoking, just as I can choose restaurants
that don't have bad music. If I don't want to work in a smoky place, I don't have to. But when the politicians ban smoking in bars, people who actually like old-fashioned smoky bars are stopped, by force, from
enjoying the kinds of establishments they like. Smoky bars cease to exist. Workers who don't mind smoke are deprived of jobs. Can't the smokers have some bars? ...Some people think the government must
decide everything. But when government decides, minorities, even large minorities, lose rights. When we get to make our own decisions, we don't all have to make the same decisions. http://www.townhall.com/opinion/columns/JohnStossel/2005/11/30/177151. html
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Friday, December 2, 2005 ~ 12:42 p.m., Dan Mitchell Wrote: Senate wants higher energy prices.
Politicians in the U.S. Senate think that American consumers should pay more for energy. They do not say this out loud, of
course, but this is the inevitable consequence of their policies. The latest example, reported by the Wall Street Journal, is that the Senate budget bill would force oil
companies to overstate their profits so that government can collect more tax revenue. Imagine if politicians ordered you to artificially inflate your income by 20
percent so that you had to pay more tax? You would be outraged, and your ire would be completely justified. But if the politicians in the Senate get away with an
Enron-style tax increase on oil companies, who knows which group they will target next?
Just when you think Congress can't possibly be more destructive, the Members surprise you again. Their latest doozy is a backdoor windfall
profits tax on oil companies that was stuffed into the Senate budget reconciliation before Thanksgiving. ...A windfall profits tax is the ultimate act of economic masochism because it taxes only domestic
production, while imports and foreign oil subsidiaries bear almost none of the cost. But wait, this time it's worse. The current Senate proposal
would actually require oil companies with daily production of 500,000 barrels or more to disregard generally accepted accounting principles, by revaluing their oil inventories. GAAP accounting (and current tax
law) allows oil firms to value barrels of oil sold at what it costs to replace that barrel. The Senate bill would require the companies to revalue their inventories by $18.75 a barrel -- an arbitrary number if
there ever was one. In effect, this means that Congress is creating the illusion of higher oil profits, and thus raising the tax liability of oil
companies by an estimated $5 billion next year. This would be on top of the 35% tax rate they already pay on their actual profits. ...Senators
want to create phony corporate profits, so they can grab them to spend. ...What's even more reprehensible about this revenue grab is its
retroactive nature. In a sense this is less a tax than it is an ex post facto confiscation of private property. http://online.wsj.com/article/SB113331721189409814.html?mod=opinion&
ojcontent=otep (subscription required)
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Friday, December 2, 2005 ~ 10:33 a.m., Dan Mitchell Wrote:
Entry levels jobs are the first step on the ladder, not a dead end. The left's hostility to "hamburger-flipper" jobs is rather puzzling, particularly since so many
people start out at places like McDonald's before climbing the career ladder and becoming very successful. In his Townhall.com column, Walter Willaims comments on the the value of "McJobs" and points out that minimum wage positions are a
stepping stone to higher pay as people learn valuable job skills. The only thing to add to Professor Williams' analysis is that the left probably hates entry-level jobs
because they are a gateway to a productive life. This is bad news for a political movement that benefits when more people are mooching off the government:
Putting down so-called dead-end jobs is a destructive insult to honest work. How dead-end is a McDonald's job? ...some well-known former
McDonald's workers. Among them: Andy Card, White House chief of staff; Jeff Bezos, founder and CEO of Amazon.com; Jay Leno, "Tonight Show" host; Carl Lewis, Olympic gold medalist; Joe Kernan, former
Indiana governor; and Robert Cornog, retired CEO of Snap-On Tools. According to Glassman, some 1,200 McDonald's restaurant owners began as crew members, and so did 20 of McDonald's 50 top worldwide
managers. These people and millions of others hardly qualify as dead-enders. The primary beneficiaries of so-called McJobs are people who enter the workforce with modest or absent work skills in areas
such as: being able to show up for work on time, operating a machine, counting change, greeting customers with decorum and courtesy, cooperating with fellow workers and accepting orders from supervisors.
Very often the people who need these job skills, which some of us might trivialize, are youngsters who grew up in dysfunctional homes and attended rotten schools. It's a bottom rung on the economic ladder that
provides them an opportunity to move up. ...Some demagogues charge that jobs at Wal-Mart and McDonald's only pay the minimum wage. That's plain wrong, as are many other things said about jobs that start
at the minimum wage. According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics: Sixty-three percent of minimum wage workers receive raises within one year of employment, and only 15 percent still earn the minimum wage
after three years. Moreover, only three percent of all hourly workers and two percent of wage and salary earners earn minimum wages. Most minimum wage earners are young -- 53 percent are between the ages of
16 and 24. http://www.townhall.com/opinion/columns/walterwilliams/2005/11/30/17714 6.html
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Thursday, December 1, 2005 ~ 12:04 p.m., Dan Mitchell Wrote: Strong growth thanks to tax cuts.
The Wall Street Journal comments on the amazing performance of the US economy. Ever since the 2003 tax cut - which
lowered income tax rates and reduced the double-taxation of dividends and capital gains, the economy has been growing by about 4 percent annually. Sadly, the
incompetent Republicans seem too timid to make those tax cuts permanent. They have not even been able to extend the expiration date on these pro-growth tax policies:
October's estimate of 3.8% third-quarter GDP growth was revised upward yesterday to 4.3% ...This represents the fastest expansion since
the first quarter of 2004, as well as the 10th consecutive quarter of growth averaging close to 4% on an annual basis. So much for those predictions of recession we heard in the spring, and again in September.
...The other big danger is policy mistakes out of Washington. With President Bush's approval at low tide, all sorts of bad ideas are on the
loose -- from "windfall profits" taxes on oil companies to tariffs against China. The Republican Congress is in such disarray that it hasn't been
able to extend even for two years -- to 2010 from 2008 -- the 15% tax rates on capital gains and dividends that have contributed so much to this expansion. http://online.wsj.com/article/SB113340232863710916.html?mod=opinion& ojcontent=otep
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Thursday, December 1, 2005 ~ 11:39 a.m., Dan Mitchell Wrote:
Turkish tax cuts show that tax competition continues to produce good result. A Tax-news.com story explains that Turkey's government is cutting
personal and corporate tax rates. These reductions - particularly the 10 percentage point reduction in the corporate rate - are the result of tax competition:
Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, announced on Tuesday that the government will seek to bring about a substantial reduction in
the country's personal and company tax burden in order to compete more effectively with the European Union and reduce tax evasion. ...the standard rate of corporate tax will be cut by 10% to 20% while the
overall tax burden for companies will be reduced to about 28% from the current 37%. ...Turkey is now facing intense tax competition from nearby countries in Eastern Europe that joined the European Union in
2004, some of which are aggressively reducing rates in order to attract foreign businesses. ...Mr Erdogan's announcement was welcomed by the country's stock market, which rose by 2% after the Prime Minister's
speech. http://www.tax-news.com/asp/story/story_open.asp?storyname=21941
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Thursday, December 1, 2005 ~ 10:27 a.m., Dan Mitchell Wrote:
France sets up government-financed TV station. Hoping to compete with CNN and BBC, the French government (read French taxpayers) is financing a
global news network. This is bound to fail - or at least be a permanent money loser - because of the shrinking population of people who speak French. But the most absurd part of the story in the EU Observer is that the French government is spending this money to publicize anti-American views. If the politicians in Paris
bothered to watch CNN and BBC, they would understand that the English-speaking news channels already have plenty of anti-American propaganda
The French government has hammered out plans to set up a global TV news channel to rival CNN and the BBC and spread France's vision of
the world. ...The French cabinet argues the new French channel would promote a vision of a "multipolar" world that is not dominated by one
superpower, and will put the country "at the forefront of the global battle of images." ...Paris established a company to run the channel and
is planning to pump state funding of €30 million into the project this year and €65 million in 2006 - reportedly just a fraction of CNN or BBC budgets. http://euobserver.com/?aid=20453&rk=1
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Thursday, December 1, 2005 ~ 9:56 a.m., Dan Mitchell Wrote: Another tax hike in Germany. It must be extremely depressing to be a German
taxpayer. The former government was controlled by socialists who thought high taxes and high spending were a recipe for prosperity. Instead, German
unemployment climbed to about 5 million people. So what happened when a new coalition government came to power? If you guessed lower taxes and smaller
government, put on your dunce cap. That would be much too logical. Instead, Angela Merkel is acting like the German version of Ted Kennedy rather than a
continental version of Margaret Thatcher. The value-added tax is going up. The top income tax rate is going up. But, as Tax-news.com reports, the greed for more
revenue is so great that other taxes are being raised as well. Some might argue that this tax hike is closing a loophole, but that still means more money for government
to waste unless the revenue is being used to finance lower tax rates:
Germany's new coalition government announced last week that a tax break for investors in certain funds will be scrapped in a bid to recoup
around EUR2 billion (US$2.4 billion) annually for the government in lost tax revenues. As a result of a new bill approved by the German Cabinet at its first legislative session on Thursday, individuals who
invest in specialist closed funds, such as those concerned with film and media financing, shares in commercial shipping operations, wind farms and leasing, will no longer be permitted to write off losses against
income tax. ...The move also represents a step towards Chancellor Angela Merkel's goal of narrowing the country's EUR35 billion budget deficit in order to bring its finances back into line with the European
Union's Stability and Growth Pact, which underpins the euro. http://www.tax-news.com/asp/story/story_open.asp?storyname=21892
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