Tax Reform in Order to Lower the Turnover Rate continue…

This stagnation tendency, the growing savings gap, has often been viewedas a problem. But why should one look at it that way? Isn’t the gap really a big resource? Should it not be encouraged? For the bigger the gap, the greater the scope for deficit financing of public spending. Indeed, the graver the stagnationist tendencies of the private sector, the lower the taxes can go, and the greater the scope for public borrowing and a growing debt. Instead of encouraging private spending as a remedy for stagnation, should we not promote private saving to widen the savings gap? For by so doing, we could deficit finance all the more, and enjoy the supply-side benefits of reduced taxation. Read the rest of this entry »

Tax Reform in Order to Lower the Turnover Rate

A necessary practical condition is that the government share of GDP be limited, that is — in the case of European welfare states — be cut back. This need not involve any reductions of the volume and quality of services provided by the government sector. If aggregate supply is relatively elastic with respect to the level of taxation, then tax cuts may provide for a great expansion of the private sector. A vigorously growing private sector will tend to reduce the share of the public sector in the economy, a reduction that might render unnecessary any actual cutbacks of the real size of government. Read the rest of this entry »

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