Memo to 50p tax trashers: Laffer Curve peaks at over 75 per cent

Alex Hern defends the 50p tax rate against the economic know-nothings who would cut it to 'boost revenue' (their own)

 

500 “business leaders” have written a letter to the Telegraph today, encouraging George Osborne to drop the 50p tax rate. The letter is short – dwarfed by the list of names – and doesn’t really attempt to make much of an argument.

Their main claim is that:

The 50p tax is set to reduce government income, and damages the economy, the public services and charitable giving.

This claim is hard to back up with empirical evidence. As we reported last month, the HMRC’s best estimate is that :

The first year of [the tax rate’s] introduction led to a “surge” in revenues of hundreds of millions of pounds.

Without data to support it, the signatories have had to resort to trotting out discredited economic theories when they have defended their letter on TV and radio. The phrase of the day is “Laffer Curve”.

The Laffer Curve is a concept coined by the economist Andrew Laffer which adds one and one and one and makes three million. It begins with three ‘common sense’ claims:

• At an income tax rate of 0 per cent, the income tax revenue will be £0, because no tax will be taken in.

• At an income tax rate of 100 per cent, the income tax revenue will be £0, because no one would do any work if they didn’t get paid.

Somewhere between 0 per cent and 100 per cent is a tax rate which maximises income tax revenue.

From this, Andrew Arthur Laffer and the signatories of todays letter draw the conclusion that cutting income tax will encourage people to work harder, and increase revenue.

Unfortunately for them, we now know where on the curve revenue is maximised – and it’s pretty far away from 50 per cent.

As Matt Yglesias writes:

Christina Romer and David Romer have a new paper looking at evidence from the 1920s and 1930s and find that the revenue-maximizing rate on the highest earners is extremely high—over eighty percent.

Among the top 0.05 percent of the income distribution they find an elasticity of taxable income of 0.19 percent which implies “that tax revenues would be maximized with a tax rate of 84 percent; that is, you could raise taxes up to 84 percent before people’s reduced incentives to make money would compensate for the higher tax rates.”

Other economists put the peak closer to 76 per cent.

Either way, if you want to maximise revenue, the 50p tax rate is about 25p too low. The Institute of Directors may want to think twice before bringing up the Laffer Curve in support of tax cuts any time soon.

See also:

It’s official: the 50p tax rate raises revenueAlex Hern, January 9th 2012

50p tax: Still a Tory obsession, still not that exceptionalAlex Hern, November 24th 2011

The 50p tax debate: Are we taxing off our nose to spite our face?Luke Bozier, September 16th 2011

Only quarter of voters want to scrap 50p taxWill Straw, August 1st 2011

Fraser Nelson is wrong on the 50p tax rateDuncan Weldon, February 24th 2011

41 Responses to “Memo to 50p tax trashers: Laffer Curve peaks at over 75 per cent”

  1. Nick Reid

    Your Laffer Curve arguments are as misconceived as the DT letter.

    You can’t just say that the Curve peaks at 76% or 84% without also saying at what salary level these peak rates apply.

    76% on £1million salaries is different from 76% on £100,000 salaries.

  2. Carlpackman

    Communist!

  3. Anonymous

    “Unfortunately for them, we now know where on the curve revenue is maximised – and it’s pretty far away from 50 per cent.”

    No, we don’t *know*.

    The rather childish nature of your presentation weakens may reduce its effectiveness. If your point is valid, that would be unfortunate.

  4. Nick Reid

    The other issue that you would need to take into consideration when determining the shape of the Laffer Curve is the ease of moving overseas to avoid tax.

    Back in the 70s it was unusual and difficult to move overseas. These days tens of thousands of Brits work in low tax places like Singapore, Hong Kong and Dubai.

    Therefore one would expect the peak of the LC to be lower today than it was thirty years ago.

    And, of course, people don’t just move to Singapore or HK for tax reasons. It’s also fun to live overseas. But it does make calculating the LC extraordinarily difficult.

  5. Shaun Richards

    Alex in your rush to give us examples from the 1920s and 30s (could you not find anything more out of date?) you have missed some important points out.

    Firstly we in the UK have a 60% income tax rate just above £100,000 a year which logically the business leaders should have argued against first.

    Secondly I wrote a blog post back on September 13th 2011 which pointed out that there are much higher effective tax rates in the UK.

    “Furthermore there is a group where the gross tax rate may be 90% or more. According to the DWP some 600,000 people are in a situation where a combination of taxes and benefit withdrawal means that they lose 90% or more of all their total income. As these are likely to be close to the bottom of the income scale we are making it incredibly unlikely that it will ever be financially viable for the people affected to ever find work. In my opinion social and economic mobility is important to an economy and its flexibility and we are failing here.

    Even if they were not important we should be ashamed of the situation which we have allowed to build up here.”

    My view has not changed and it is that if we have any scope for tax cuts we should start at the highest effective rates which would help many of our poorer citizens.

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