Leftist Women Are an Abomination
Roy Cooper's Legacy of 'Death by Illegal Alien' Rears Its Ugly Head Again
Oh, So Now Impeachment Hoax Vindman Is Afraid to Speak Up?
Here's What Could Be Part of the 'Really Big News' Trump Will Drop...
California Is Killing Itself
If the Evidence Is Settled, Show Us the Data
Mr. Jefferson and Our Two Criminal Enemies
The More Things Don't Change
Ro, Ro, Ro Your Boat
On the Iran War, NATO Chief Agrees With Trump—the Media Buried the Lede
Your Next Senator Will Finally Face the Social Security Decision Point
At Last, Britain Stands Up to Iran's Terror Masters
The Supreme Court Left Women's Sports Half Protected
The Bottom One Percent We Rarely Talk About
Russian Nationals Charged in Sprawling Cybercrime Scheme Targeting U.S. Infrastructure
OPINION

The IMF, Higher Taxes, and Mitchell’s Law

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Townhall.com.
The IMF, Higher Taxes, and Mitchell’s Law

Here are three common-sense principles.

  1. Higher taxes are misguided. They undermine prosperity and finance bigger government.
  2. Bailouts also are misguided. They facilitate corruption and encourage moral hazard.
  3. And international bureaucracies are misguided. They promote statism and squander money.
Advertisement

So what’s the “perfect storm” of bad policy?

How about when international bureaucracies offers a bailout in exchange for higher taxes?

Here are some very unpleasant details from Reuters about how the International Monetary Fund is working with other international bureaucracies to coerce Cyprus into raising taxes in order to provide a bailout.

International lenders would like Cyprus to raise its corporate tax and introduce a levy on capital gains and a financial transaction tax to ensure it can repay a euro zone bailout it asked for last year, euro zone officials said on Thursday. …One official, briefed on the talks between the International Monetary Fund, the European Central Bank and the European Commission – known as the Troika – and the new government in Nicosia, said no decisions had yet been taken on any of the taxes.

I’ve already explained that Cyprus got in trouble because government spending rose faster than the ability of the private sector to finance it.

Advertisement

So if the problem is that the burden of government spending is excessive, then how does it make sense to increase the corporate tax burden? To impose a capital gains tax? Or to levy a tax on financial transactions?

The answer, of course, is that it doesn’t make sense.

This is a very perverse example of Mitchell’s Law, with the pinhead bureaucrats at the IMF and elsewhere misallocating global capital on the condition that Cyprus increase an already onerous tax burden.

One bad policy leading to another bad policy. And it’s happening with our money. Something to think about the next time the fiscal pyromaniacs at the International Monetary Fund ask for additional bailout authority.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement