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: Politix
How to Create 11 Million REAL Jobs
2010-01-27
A new economic report conducted by the Milken Institute and sponsored by the National Association of Manufacturers (NAM) shows that changes to economic and tax policies and investment in key infrastructure project categories could create more than 11 million jobs in the United States this decade.
Has the Job Creation Czar seen this?
The study analyzes how reducing corporate tax rates, establishing a permanent research and development (R&D) credit, modernizing the U.S. system of export controls and making major investments in energy and transportation infrastructure would create jobs and make the United States more competitive.

Key findings include:

1. Reducing the U.S. corporate income tax to match the average of other industrial countries (OECD nations) would trigger new growth. By 2019, it could boost real GDP by $375.5 billion and create an additional 350,000 manufacturing jobs - increasing total employment by 2.1 million.

2. A permanent R&D credit, increased by 25%, could boost real GDP by $206 billion (1.2%) and generate 316,000 manufacturing jobs.

3. Modernizing U.S. export controls could increase exports in high-value areas, enhancing real GDP by $64 billion by 2019 and creating 160,000 manufacturing jobs.
Posted by:Bobby

#12  Smoot-Hawley 2.0, anyone?

Does anyone (besides the Dim-ocRats) really think that's a good idea?
Posted by: Barbara Skolaut   2010-01-27 22:00  

#11  IMPORT Duties could go a long way to creating jobs too... Just saying...

yep trade barrier methods maybe? who knows I am not an economist.
Posted by: Tyranysaurus Claiger7518   2010-01-27 21:29  

#10  Economists will tell you just about anything. They are not believable as a group. The track record of economists up to the onset of the crisis in 2007 STINKS.
Posted by: Anguper Hupomosing9418   2010-01-27 21:10  

#9  The main winners from low(er) corporate tax rates are stockholders* More faith-based reasoning. When Goldman Sachs starts paying out dividends we can revisit this issue.
Posted by: Anguper Hupomosing9418   2010-01-27 21:09  

#8  The main winners from low(er) corporate tax rates are stockholders*. Countries with low corporate tax rates such as Holland, get the money back from high personal tax rates.

* Although the real winners indirectly, are consumers. Prices are lower due to the lower cost of doing business.

Economists will tell you that taxing businesses at all is a bad idea, because all the money businesses make flows to employees, stockholders, the government or new investments.
Posted by: phil_b   2010-01-27 20:49  

#7  So not only does it increase employment, it increases high wage employment. You left out the key part about "in the US" plus another key part. A few corporate insiders sucking their bonus money out of corporate operations will do nothing to help the bagholders stockholders or the peons lower paid employees.
Posted by: Anguper Hupomosing9418   2010-01-27 20:36  

#6  IMPORT Duties could go a long way to creating jobs too... Just saying...
Posted by: 3dc   2010-01-27 20:01  

#5   I fail to see how decreasing corporate tax rates can possibly cause increased employment in the US.

Countries engage in tax competition for precisely this reason. In particular, it influences the location of head offices and other functions that could be located anywhere, such as IT.

So not only does it increase employment, it increases high wage employment.
Posted by: phil_b   2010-01-27 19:34  

#4  "The linkage between cutting corporate taxes and increasing US employment is driven by faith and wishful thinking."

It depends on what is considered a "tax". If you eliminate things like minimum wage laws that do nothing but drive up unemployment and increase poverty and maybe create a national "right to work" law that breaks the union stranglehold on wages in many industries, then yeah, we might get somewhere.

Otherwise the only increase in jobs we see are the white collar jobs from companies with a corporate headquarters in the US while their manufacturing is done elsewhere.
Posted by: crosspatch   2010-01-27 17:37  

#3  Exactly AH. Even though I think corporate tax rates should be zero (people, not legal fictions, pay taxes) the $700B/year monetary drain that is killing the US economy is from the failure to control imports. The rest is just nibbling on the margins.
Posted by: ed   2010-01-27 17:21  

#2  I fail to see how decreasing corporate tax rates can possibly cause increased employment in the US. US corporations seem hell-bent on exporting US jobs any way they can, and they've been very successful at this. The linkage between cutting corporate taxes and increasing US employment is driven by faith and wishful thinking.
Posted by: Anguper Hupomosing9418   2010-01-27 17:13  

#1  Sorry, I thought I selected non-WOT.
Posted by: Bobby   2010-01-27 16:48  

00:00