Boston Herald

Biden’s tax hike won’t spare the middle class

- By Michael R. StRain Michael R. Strain is a syndicated columnist.

President Joe Biden is reportedly considerin­g the first major tax increase in several decades. It won’t be clear whether higher taxes are worth paying until more is known about the spending programs they would finance.

But it’s not too soon to say that at least one aspect of Biden’s approach doesn’t add up: The promise to leave middle-class taxpayers alone.

A top White House economist made clear on Monday that Biden doesn’t want to impose costs on anyone earning less than $400,000 per year. At the same time, the White House is likely to push for a higher corporate tax rate. These goals are incompatib­le. If the corporate rate goes up, it will reduce the incomes of the middle class.

The corporate tax rate was lowered from 35% to 21% as part of the 2017 tax law. Biden is said to be considerin­g an increase to 28%. Tempting though it is to wish that faceless entities like corporatio­ns would shoulder the burden, sparing individual­s the pain, in reality corporate taxes are always financed by people. The only question is which ones.

Economists used to think that the burden of corporate taxation fell almost entirely on the owners of capital in the form of lower share prices or, say, smaller dividend checks.

That view became outdated as it became easier for capital to cross national borders. Workers, by contrast, are much less internatio­nally mobile. This leaves them more vulnerable when business owners are forced to pony up higher taxes on their business income.

A higher corporate rate lowers the after-tax return on additional investment. Less investment makes workers less productive, which in turn makes them less valuable. If workers are less valuable, then businesses will reduce efforts to attract and retain them, putting downward pressure on starting salaries and restrainin­g wage growth. So the burden of the corporate tax increase would fall on workers in the form of lower wages.

Like any economic theory, this one has holes. For example, to the extent that corporate profits are generated by a brand name and not by additional investment, then a higher tax rate wouldn’t be expected to lower wages. But the theory is the right place to start.

The idea that wages go down when business taxes go up is the consensus view of economists. The Tax Policy Center (a joint venture of the Urban Institute and Brookings Institutio­n) assigns 20% of the burden of the corporate tax to workers in its economic models. The nonpartisa­n Congressio­nal Budget Office concludes that workers bear 25% of the tax’s burden.

The noisy and rancorous debates over the 2017 tax law will make it harder to sort out the pros and cons of Biden’s proposal now because both sides of that debate retreated to political talking points that gave short shrift to economic knowledge.

The quality and winner of the political debate won’t change the fact that workers — very much including those with incomes below $400,000 — will see their wages fall if Biden hikes the corporate rate. That’s only one reason not to do it. Future prosperity will be strengthen­ed if the U.S. continues to be thought of as the place for corporatio­ns to set up shop and do business. A tax rate at least as low as the ones in Europe and most other advanced economies is one way to help ensure U.S. global competitiv­eness.

If you tax something, you get less of it. Does the U.S. want less corporate income? I don’t think so.

Biden’s proposal to pay for new spending instead of financing it by piling on more debt is refreshing and laudable. But Mr. President, please look elsewhere to raise revenue.

 ?? AP ?? CROSSOVER: Increasing business taxes will put a dent in many Americans’ retirement accounts.
AP CROSSOVER: Increasing business taxes will put a dent in many Americans’ retirement accounts.

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