The Star Malaysia - StarBiz

Corporate-tax proposal in Senate stokes economists’ concern

-

A fresh initiative in the US Senate to put a tax penalty on big companies as a way of forcing higher minimum wages prompted a sceptical reaction among economists including a top adviser to former President Barack Obama.

“This is a really big, complicate­d, brand new proposal. It is ‘possible’ that it works,” Jason Furman, who served in Obama’s White House and is now a professor of economic policy at Harvard University, said in a tweet.

“It is also ‘possible’ that another tax version works. But I would be extremely nervous about trying out a brand new idea like this with virtually no vetting.”

Two Senate committee chairs, Ron Wyden and Bernie Sanders, pitched the idea of a tax penalty Thursday night, following a major procedural blow to the US$15 minimum-wage provision Democrats wanted in President Joe

Biden’s Covid-19 relief bill.

As of Friday afternoon, Wyden’s staff were still drafting the plan, which would include a 5% payroll-tax penalty for large companies that pay lower wages, and a tax-credit incentive of as much as US$10,000 for small businesses that boost wages.

The US House passed the relief bill, including the minimum-wage measure, early Saturday. Yet efforts to use the bill as a vehicle have hit a wall in the Senate after the chamber’s parliament­arian, a nonpartisa­n official, ruled the wage hike doesn’t qualify for the fast-track budget procedure used by Democrats.

Economists already debate the value of a higher minimum wage, with most seeing some trade-off – depending on the level – between income and spending gains and job losses as employers absorb higher labour costs.

One disadvanta­ge of targeting big companies is that they employ only a fraction of lower-income workers, and have more flexibilit­y to get around new rules.

Wyden and Sanders also did float incentives to boost wages among smaller firms, many of which have been hit hard by the pandemic.

“Most minimum wage workers are not in mega corporatio­ns,” Arindrajit Dube, a University of Massachuse­tts economics professor who’s studied the minimum wage, said in a tweet Friday.

“Also, what safeguards would prevent large companies from outsourcin­g low wage work to smaller contractor­s?”

Wyden said in his outline that there would be measures “to prevent companies from trying to outsource labour to avoid paying living wages.”

Introducin­g new tax policy is complicate­d, and would likely lead to lobbying for exceptions and debate about who gets included and who doesn’t, said Stephen Stanley, chief economist at Amherst Pierpont Securities LLC.

“It just becomes this eternal struggle to get your firm included in the benefits or excluded from the costs,” Stanley said in an interview.

Many of the largest employers of low-paid workers in the United States, including Amazon.com Inc, Target Corp, Walmart Inc and Costco Wholesale Corp have already been raising wages of their employees in recent years, under pressure from critics and labour groups.

The country’s big corporatio­ns – who would be subject to the proposed tax penalty – wouldn’t see as much of an impact from a federal minimum-wage increase as small businesses, which strongly oppose the proposal. —Bloomberg

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia