Two quick things about taxes.
Studies suggest that if you try to
increase government revenue by raising tax rates, the rich leave. The result?
Your higher tax rates result in about the same tax revenue. So, if your route
to making your government more vibrant and healthy is raising tax rates, you'll
fail.
Studies also suggest that tax
breaks for job formation are really expensive. It looks like you have to pay
about $100,000 per job by taking the tax incentive route. So, if your route to
making your business sector more vibrant and healthy is lowering tax rates,
you'll fail. The rest of the community is unlikely to get $100,000 back in taxes and additional business for each new job created in the area.
Tax policy - whether to raise tax
rates for your government or cut tax rates for your businesses - is an
admission that you don't have any good ideas for development.
Economic development is a slow game
and has a few elements.
1. Create an alliance between city
leaders, education, and industry to facilitate the creation of wealth and
jobs through the creation of new businesses and technologies. Fred Terman at Stanford worked to bring in venture capitalists onto campus to collaborate with his professors and students; his early students included Hewlett and Packard.
2. Welcome and attract the best and
brightest from any and everywhere. Do this by hosting conferences on important
topics, by developing university programs for emerging technologies, nurturing
startups with mentors and financing, and promoting a culture of
entrepreneurship starting as early as high school. Alphabet (nee Google) has 70-some thousand employees and - like half of the tech companies in Silicon Valley - was co-founded by an immigrant.
3. Make your city a great place to
live. This gets overlooked but ultimately you want to attract employees and
entrepreneurs and world-class researchers who can afford to live anywhere and
will choose to spend a good portion of their wealth and income to live in an
area that they love and is stimulating. This means public works projects like
art and museums and it means taking advantage of and incorporating into your
city, natural beauty and / or good weather. California has relatively great weather and Seattle - a place that has created an abundance of wealth in the last 30 to 40 years - is surrounded by natural beauty. Edinburgh has developed a vibrant startup scene in part because it is such a great city that Scotland's best and brightest are happy to live there, making it easier for companies to attract talent. Creating a great community also means including a lot of voices in
the definition and pursuit of quality of life.
Bookstore door in Seattle, close to Pike Market |
Each of the above points deserve
their own blog post - their own set of books, really - but taxes are tools
towards these goals, not something that will magically create a better
community. You shouldn't invest in Business A instead of Business B simply
because Business A said they need less capital. Nor should you be impressed
that Business B needs more capital so is obviously building a more impressive
business. Capital is necessary to a business just as tax revenue is necessary
for a community but the fact of it being higher or lower is largely incidental
to whether that business or community will prosper.
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