As the Mercatus Center’s Veronique DeRugy explained last week and as we covered here in Capitolism’s early days, the economics of corporate taxes are pretty well settled: They distort business decisions, are generally considered a poor way to raise revenue, and their ultimate burden falls not on the company itself but on a mix of its shareholders, workers, and customers, with economists disagreeing about the exact share each group bears. Nevertheless, tax hikers like Biden support increasing corporate tax rates because they do raise revenue and/or, thanks to voter ignorance of the economics, are easy to demagogue. (“Only a libertarian fundamentalist monster could be against taxing Big/Woke Corporations as much or more than American Workers!” Sigh.)
There is, however, another important—if unsaid—reason why many U.S. politicians want, even need, a high corporate tax rate: It lets them direct the economy via a favorite (if not the favorite) tool of central planners everywhere: targeted tax breaks, especially tax credits.
Corporate Tax Subsidy Growth Here and Abroad