You have commented 339 times on Rantburg.

Your Name
Your e-mail (optional)
Website (optional)
My Original Nic        Pic-a-Nic        Sorry. Comments have been closed on this article.
Bold Italic Underline Strike Bullet Blockquote Small Big Link Squish Foto Photo
Home Front Economy
US public finances feel the pinch
2008-01-11
The economic downturn in the US is starting to hit government revenues, the head of the Congressional Budget Office has told the Financial Times.

In an interview, Peter Orszag, the CBO director, said the slowdown “is showing up in revenue”. Tax receipts were softer “across revenue as a whole” but “the slowing is most marked in corporate tax receipts”.

Mr Orszag said any further deterioration in growth would have a still larger effect on tax revenues.

Revenues “disproportionately fall when income weakens and rise when income strengthens”, he said, in part because of the progressive tax code.

His comments echo warnings by the International Monetary Fund that the credit crisis and weaker growth outlook will have an effect on public finances in many countries, including the US.

The CBO director said the slowdown in tax receipts was sharpest “with respect to corporate income tax receipts, because the growth there between 2003 and 2007 was so dramatic”.

Corporate tax receipts more than doubled from 1.2 per cent of gross domestic product in 2003 to 2.7 per cent in 2007, surprising experts including the CBO.

Mr Orszag said one big reason for this increase was the rise in the share of national income going to corporate profits at the expense of owners of debt and labour.

“Since debt is tax preferred relative to corporate profits, that has a significant effect on tax receipts.” The corporate profit share, he said, “would likely decline in response to a weaker economy” – undermining corporate tax receipts.

Some economists believe that, in addition to cyclical factors, the repricing of credit under way in financial markets could also lead to a shift in the national income share back from corporate profits to debt.

If this happened, corporate tax revenues could surprise on the downside even relative to growth in the coming years, just as they surprised on the upside in the past few years. Mr Orszag declined to comment on whether this might happen.
Posted by:lotp

#4  ION, SPACEWAR > WORLD ECONOMIC FORUM - HIGHEST LEVELS OF POLITICAL, ECONOMIC UNCERTAINTIES FOR AT LEAST A DECADE; + WALKER'S WORLD - THE UNION OF THE WEST, + ANALYSTS: US MISSLE SHIELD MEANS A CHANGE IN [National-Global]STRATEGY.

Dubya wins the GWOT, but loses America to Socialism???
Posted by: JosephMendiola   2008-01-11 22:33  

#3  Well whatever they do, I hope they don't reform the tax code or enforce the trade pacts. That would be totally racist and hegemonic.
Posted by: bigjim-ky   2008-01-11 12:16  

#2  Our tax revenues began to decline three years ago and show no sign of recovery.

Illinois tax revenues began to decline decades ago when the attitudes of politicians in Springfield bosses in Chicago began to shift in favour of higher workman's compensation, higher corporate taxes, and unemployment insurance. Illinois manufacturing and industry, already under fire from glabalization and cheap imports started leaving in droves, as did potential wage earnings and tax payers. Illinois is a classic example of a state controlled by a corrupt, socialist megalopolis (downstate rural counties be damned), bent on migration to an anarchistic, third world economy.
Posted by: Besoeker   2008-01-11 02:54  

#1  If you want to see the economic future, look at Illinois. Our tax revenues began to decline three years ago and show no sign of recovery. Last year and this year government workers will be laid off wihout severance packages.
but on the bright side, inflated insider no bid contracts continue.
Posted by: George Thriper4174   2008-01-11 01:08  

00:00