U.S. President Barack Obama declared this week that he is in favor
of
letting
tax cuts for the rich expire; those tax
cuts were enacted under George W. Bush.
Letting all the Bush-era tax cuts (for both the
wealthy and others) expire would aid the U.S. economy
by helping tackle the country’s deficit , MIT Sloan Professor Simon
Johnson argues in
New York Times commentary. What’s more,
Johnson maintains, “tax cuts are an ineffiicent form of [economic]
stimulus.”
However, not everyone agrees. Jeffrey A. Miron, a senior lecturer in
economics at Harvard University maintains, also at
The New York
Times website, that
“extending the Bush tax cuts — permanently — is
a crucial step in restoring economic growth.”

Meanwhile, MIT Sloan professor Thomas A. Kochan recently took a quite
different stand: In an op-ed in the
Los Angeles Times, Kochan
suggested that long-term
job creation would benefit if individuals
earning $1 million or more saw their taxes raised — to
1970 levels of about 70%.
Professor
Thomas A.Kochan
Kochan’s reasoning? Right now,executives at public companies have an
incentive to take short-term measures to boost stock price — and their
own bonuses linked to stock price — rather than invest in longer-term
measures likely to create jobs. So Kochan thinks we should make the lure
of additional executive compensation less tempting to decision
makers– through substantially higher taxes on high compensation.
Kochan does advocate expanding business’s tax credits for job creation —
and an emphasis on partnership between workers and management to
increase productivity.
For more on Kochan’s ideas about the strategic choices executives
face in labor relations, read his essay
“Taking the High Road,” which
appeared in the Summer 2006 issue of
MIT Sloan Management Review.
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