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Stimulate The Economy By Elimination Of Payroll Tax

Posted on April 2, 2009 at 12:44 pm

Mike Hammock thinks it a fine idea:

A more interesting recent proposal is the elimination of the payroll tax. Payroll taxes are taxes taken out of everyone’s paycheck up to the first $102,000. Income over that amount is not subject to payroll tax. Payroll taxes are essentially a tax on employment; they are a disincentive for workers to work, and a disincentive for employers to hire. Getting rid of the payroll tax would instantly put money in the pockets of both workers and employers, encouraging the former to spend (although they might just save most of it) and, more importantly, encouraging the latter to hire. Several economists, including Greg Mankiw, suggested eventually replacing payroll taxes with a higher gasoline tax, or a carbon tax, in order to reduce pollution. I think this sounds like a much better idea than a messy spending bill, which may do very little. Or maybe it will do a lot. I’m not a macroeconomist, and my opinion on this may not be very valuable. On the other hand, I’m not convinced that the real macroeconomists know, either.

Comments

2 Responses to “Stimulate The Economy By Elimination Of Payroll Tax”

  1. Jon writes
    April 2nd, 2009 1:21 pm

    Agreed. Current situation economic stimulation considerations aside, replacing all or part of the taxes on production with a tax on natural resource consumption/destruction is just the right thing to do. Geolibertarianism 101.

  2. R. Neal writes
    April 2nd, 2009 1:54 pm

    “my opinion on this may not be very valuable”

    Agreed.

    Payroll taxes aren’t even taxes really, and they certainly aren’t taxes on employment.

    I always love the “disincentive to work” argument, too. I don’t recall ever hearing about anyone quitting their job because they had to pay a few bucks per week for Social Security and Medicare.

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