Tax Fraud Is Not A Healthy Basis for Growth

April 12, 2012

The NYT wants readers to be sympathetic to countries that set themselves up as tax havens for corporations who would rather not pay their taxes. In a piece on the problems facing the Cypriot banking system the NYT told readers that the Cyprus does not want to turn to the European Union for a bailout of its banking system because:

“In return, the Union might demand that Cyprus raise its 10 percent tax on corporate profits, a crucial selling point and key to an economy based on financial and business services like accounting.”

This is a strange assertion. A bloated state bureaucracy can be called a key to an economy that is based on a bloated state bureaucracy. This is not a basis for healthy growth, just as being a tax haven is not in general a basis for healthy growth.

There is no obvious reason to be more sympathetic to a government that wants to maintain a country as a tax haven than there is to be sympathetic to a government that wants to maintain a bloated bureaucracy as a patronage system. Neither provide a platform for healthy sustainable growth.

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