gcomeau wrote:PeterZ wrote:
Not an apples to apples comparison, my friend. Throughout the 1950's the rest of the world had just completed rebuilding their decimated industries from WWII. The US manufacturing sector still had a massive advantage in production of just about everything. The US could have passed along higher costs and still managed to sell a sh**load to the rest of the world.
Try that now, and everyone will clean out clocks. We no longer have any serious advantage in almost any industry. Even our pharma industry gets hammered as other nations refuse to pay for the full R&D costs of our medicines. Higher taxes will mean higher prices which lead to lower sales of products produced domestically and sales of exports.
Please, do walk me through how higher top marginal *income tax* rates translate into higher product prices. I'm all ears.
Step 1. Taxes increase on corporate income because of fewer loopholes. 1955 corp rate was 52%, but still had loopholes. Increased corporate taxes and income taxes means corporations have less income and pass through entities taxed at the individual rate see a very large increase.
Step 2. Company raises prices to increase return to shareholders and owners of pass through entities increase prices to offset their lost income
Step 3. Reminder that incomes haven't increased for the vast majority of US taxpayers
Step 4. US Buyers see higher prices for domestic goods. Imported goods may remain constant if the foreign exporter is taxed abroad. Domestic exporters have to increase prices for the product they ship abroad.
Step 5. Us goods become more expensive relative to imported foreign goods