Countries from China to India to Indonesia are slashing taxes for businesses to spur growth amid a gloomy outlook for global economic expansion.
Business
Standard : How do you spur demand in an economy? By raising
direct taxes and distributing the money among the poor, says this
year’s winner of the Nobel prize for economics.
Reducing
taxes to boost investments is a myth spread by businesses, says
Abhijit Banerjee, who won the prize along with Esther Duflo of the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Michael Kremer of Harvard
University for their approach to alleviating global poverty. “You
are giving incentives to the rich who are already sitting on tons of
cash.”
Countries
from China to India to Indonesia are slashing taxes for businesses to
spur growth amid a gloomy outlook for global economic expansion. The
International Monetary Fund this month made a fifth-straight cut to
its 2019 global growth forecast, pegging it at 3 per cent.
“You
don’t boost growth by cutting taxes, you do that by giving money to
people,” Banerjee said in an interview Monday, suggesting that cash
in the hands of the poor will drive consumption. “Investment will
respond to demand.”
China
earlier this year rolled out tax cuts worth $280 billion on personal
income and corporate profits, while India surprised with a $20
billion stimulus, taking its corporate tax rate to among the lowest
in Asia. Indonesia also plans to lower tax on companies to 20 per
cent from 25 per cent.
MIT
Professor Abhijit
Banerjee spoke in New Delhi where he was promoting his book ‘Good
Economics for Hard Times.’
Last
year, US President Donald Trump unveiled a $1.5 trillion tax package,
and has promised “very substantial” tax cuts in 2020 for
“middle-income” Americans.
It’s
the widening inequality in developed countries such as the US that
has angered people and pushing the world into a trade war, Banerjee
said. “It is unbelievable that in the name of growth you have
allowed inequality to explode to this point.”
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