Failure Is a Choice
Oh, There Are Problems With Trump's Surgeon General Pick
What Is Going on With California?
Keystone XL Pipeline Is Back Once Trump Retakes Office, But There's a Problem
MTG Lays Out Her Vision for New Subcommittee
Here's the Question That Caused KJP to Abruptly End the Press Briefing
Trump's Border Czar Reveals He's Getting Death Threats
Rand Paul Has a Warning for Denver Mayor Who Vowed to Block Trump's...
The Perfect Revenge
Powerful: Canada's Conservative Leader Rips Trudeau Apart Over Antisemitic Riots
Trump Is Planning an Executive Order to Remove Transgenders From the Military: Report
New Poll: Americans Are Liking What They're Seeing From Trump's Presidential Transition
Horrific: Idaho Teen Arrested After a Dead Newborn Was Discovered in a Safe...
Serial Sex Offender Who Was Repeatedly Released Went on to Assault a Woman...
Don’t Let the Left Destroy Trump’s Picks with Hypocritical Accusations and Unrealistic Sta...
OPINION

A Tax Cut That Works For All Americans

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Townhall.com.
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement

When you hear the phrase “corporate tax cut,” what do you picture? Middle-class workers, or Uncle Moneybags, the character from the Monopoly board game?

Advertisement

Probably the latter, unfortunately. Too many Americans buy into the popular misconception that such a cut would benefit only financial fat cats.

And who can blame them? Who’s telling them the truth: that a tax cut for corporations is a tax cut for the average American?

The United States has the highest corporate tax rate in the developed world -- a top marginal federal rate of 35 percent (38.9 percent when you include the state average). At first glance, sure, this levy seems to hit the rich and those who own corporations the hardest. A grumbling worker might think, “Good riddance!”

But that reaction makes a lot less sense when you consider what the corporate tax does. Business owners wind up with a lot less money to spend. That means they’re investing less in the very businesses that employ the grumbling worker and his colleagues. That means fewer jobs. Lower wages. Less-competitive businesses.

Indeed, a corporate tax cut is actually a remarkably “progressive” tax change, as it benefits workers who earn their income in the form of wages. And those at the bottom of the income scale stand the most to gain from it.

They’re the ones who really suffer when businesses can’t expand -- and therefore can’t hire more workers, or pay their current workers a higher wage.

Advertisement

But the negative effects don’t stop there. It’s easy to speak of “corporations” as faceless entities, but think about it: they’re made up of people. I don’t just mean the workers, as important as they are. I mean the people who invest in them through the stock market.

Here again, misperceptions rule. It’s easy to think of Gordon Gekko when the stock market comes up, but what we should think about is … ourselves.

“Across the U.S., corporations employ 54.8 million hard-working individuals who create products for global and domestic markets,” writes tax expert Adam Michel. “Corporate profits also are ultimately claimed by people. More than half of Americans invest in the stock market, and almost 40 percent of corporate stock is owned through retirement plans.”

Unfortunately, that isn’t the message our representatives in Washington are hearing as they consider ways to cut taxes. Government scorekeepers such as the Joint Committee on Taxation, and the Congressional Budget Office, are telling them most of the benefits of cutting corporate taxes go to owners, not workers.

At least ten separate economic studies show this isn’t true -- that at least 75 percent of corporate taxes are passed on to workers in the form of lower wages. But the CBO and the Joint Committee insist it’s the other way around.

Advertisement

Why? Because they’re not really accounting for how a corporate tax cut would help lower-wage workers. According to Michel, a 20-point cut in the corporate income tax rate, from 35 percent to 15 percent, could boost the relative market incomes of the poorest Americans by 2.4 percent. That would mean $365 for a household that earns $15,000 a year.

And let’s not forget what it would mean for the economy as a whole if we make it financially attractive for businesses who have gone abroad to return to the U.S. Think of the jobs they could contribute, and the economic boost that would result.

The fact is, we all pay the corporate tax. And we all have a stake in seeing it cut. Let’s ignore the naysayers -- and get it done.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos