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An older article, but it bears repeating......

Lapcat

Governor
since some still have questions and doubts re: the US corporate tax rates and their significance concerning our standing and competitive edge with other nations.

U.S. to have Highest Corporate Tax Rate in the World

Most of the time being number one is good. But when it comes to having the highest tax rate in the world, it is much better for a country to be bringing up the rear.

Currently Japan holds the inauspicious distinction of having the highest corporate income tax rate in the world (39.5 percent). The United States is a close second, only a few tenths-of-percentage points behind.

Japan will soon fall from the top spot because it has finally recognized what the rest of the industrialized world realized over a decade ago: A low corporate income tax rate is vital for economic growth in the global marketplace. As such, Japan just announced it will reduce its corporate income tax rate by 5 percentage points down to around 35 percent. This remains far above the 25 percent average rate of other industrialized countries, but for them it is a start.

Japan’s reduction will leave the U.S. in the uncomfortable position of having the highest corporate income tax rate in the industrialized world. Hopefully Congress will finally see fit to lower the rate now that we will hold that disreputable title.

The U.S. ended up at the top because it stood still while the rest of the world was cutting its rates. As the chart below shows, in 1990 the U.S. corporate tax rate was middle of the pack. In fact, it was lower than the global average. The years since have seen every other industrialized country aggressively lower its rate.

awww.foundry.org_wp_content_uploads_corp_tax_chart.gif

The top marginal corporate income tax rate is an important factor influencing economic growth and job creation, because it determines how much the tax will reduce the return the business earns from new investment. As a result, it is a large determinant when businesses decide where to locate their next venture—and where they will hire new employees.

The high rate in the U.S. is driving businesses and jobs to other countries. Those jobs will continue to flow to other countries if the U.S. insists on levying its self-defeating corporate income tax rate. It is long past time for Congress to lower the rate so it is equal or below the 25 percent average of our competitors. If it does not, businesses and jobs will continue their exodus to more friendly locales.

http://blog.heritage.org/2010/12/15/u-s-to-have-highest-corporate-tax-rate-in-the-world/
 

degsme

Council Member
RIGHT... HEritage...

Oh that oh so intellectually honest source... Sorry when you can get mainstream economists supporting the claim, you might have a case to make.
 

Bo-4

Senator
I had only to scroll down and see that it was a Heritage Foundation blog in order to make the wise decision to dump..
 

NinaS

Senator
Supporting Member
What but? Heritage is cooking the numbers.

The effective corporate tax rate in the USA is around 20% the second lowest in major economies of the industrialized west http://mpra.ub.uni-muenchen.de/3808/1/MPRA_paper_3808.pdf

And heritage simply fails to acknowledge this. That makes their claims about as credible as Gingrich talking about marriage
The right phrase is that they "cooked" the numbers. Of course her information is over a year old.
 
We know y'all don't believe anyone but MoveOn. You know that org that is owned by George Soros. The guy that makes his money off of the downfall of the US.
 

Barbella

Senator
He posted the 2001 version....undoubtedly on purpose. Here's what the updated (2008) version says:

Comparing International Corporate Tax Rates: U.S. Corporate Tax Rate Increasingly Out of Line by Various Measures

by Robert Carroll

Fiscal Fact No.143

The U.S. has left the major features of its business tax system unchanged over the past fifteen years. Meanwhile, other countries have been changing theirs, potentially hurting the competitiveness of the United States. Perhaps most emblematic of the trend abroad is lower corporate tax rates in virtually all developed nations. As a result, the United States now has the second-highest statutory tax rate among OECD member nations.

Figure 1 below tells this story: The U.S. became a low-tax rate country with enactment of the Tax Reform Act of 1986, dropping its federal corporate tax rate from 46 to 34 percent. But since then the reduction in corporate tax rates by most other developed nations has left the United States in the unenviable position of a high-tax rate country.1
http://www.taxfoundation.org/news/show/23561.html

 

degsme

Council Member
Yup Tax Foundation about as liberal and unbiased as Heritage.

Try again.
The Tax Foundation Story
The year was 1937, the heart of the Great Depression. During the previous decade, first under Herbert Hoover, then under Franklin Roosevelt, federal spending had climbed 170 percent; over the previous five years internal revenue collections had risen 198 percent.
Concerned about the effect such expansion might have on private sector growth, a small group of business executives gathered in New York City to discuss how they could monitor fiscal activities at all levels of government and convey the information to the general public. They decided to launch an organization which, through research and analysis, could inform and educate Americans using objective, reliable data on government finance.
 

degsme

Council Member
He posted the 2001 version....undoubtedly on purpose. Here's what the updated (2008) version says:
Updated by whom?? the biased Tax Foundation? I use Tax Foundation data only when it refutes conservative claims precisely because it is such a conservative biased source
 
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