A Barrons editorial presents the VAT issue as well as anyone. It gets right at the VAT tariff vs. trade issue.
I’m going to break the law by reprinting the full copyrighted piece here.
Memo
to Barrons’ lawyers - If you don’t like it, let me know and I’ll take
the whole piece down. But I’ll provide the link to send a few
more potential subscribers your way.
My only comment is that the
Barrons piece is written for Republicans, which is fine. But the
message needs to come through to Democrats, because this should not be
a partisan issue. Barrons decries corporate taxes, and many
Democrats like those taxes. There is a good reason to shift away
from corporate and other income taxes, but the language must appeal to
those who justifiably think Big Corporations have too much power.
I will feature the key Barrons point here, and then reprint the whole thing:
Self-Punishment
Taxes on world trade are levied according to a set of rules that
penalize the United States for its reliance on corporate income taxes.
Under the rules of the World Trade Organization, value-added taxes need
not be levied if the taxed goods or services are exported. No such
export rebate is allowed for corporate income taxes. If a German car
might be liable for $5,000 of value-added tax, its manufacturer would
receive the $5,000 back from the tax authorities after driving the car
onto a ship bound for the United States. A Honda exported from these
shores would carry its share of the manufacturer’s corporate income tax
across the ocean, with no rebate allowed.The U.S. Congress goes on year after year holding hearings about this
inequity, and the U.S. goes on and on running up trade deficits, but
nothing is ever done to secure better tax treatment for our exports by
substituting a value-added tax for the corporate income tax, or by
negotiating equal treatment for both kinds of taxation.
****
Monday, January 7, 2008
EDITORIAL COMMENTARY
Taxation Without Justification
Cut the corporate income tax or, better yet, abolish it
Taxes on world trade are levied according to a set of rules that
penalize the United States for its reliance on corporate income taxes.
Under the rules of the World Trade Organization, value-added taxes need
not be levied if the taxed goods or services are exported. No such
export rebate is allowed for corporate income taxes. If a German car
might be liable for $5,000 of value-added tax, its manufacturer would
receive the $5,000 back from the tax authorities after driving the car
onto a ship bound for the United States. A Honda exported from these
shores would carry its share of the manufacturer’s corporate income tax
across the ocean, with no rebate allowed. (read more)
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