At TechElect, we love substantive policy debates, and Alan Beattie’s in today’s Financial Times on the presidential candidates’ approaches to corporate tax reform tax reform certainly fits the bill. TechElect has already the candidates’ competing tax plans, and we applaud the FT’s deep dive into both presidential candidates’ positions on tax reform.
TechElect finds much to agree on in the article. Beattie is right to point out that Washington has failed to keep up with the changes that America’s global economic competitors have enacted in their tax structures – changes that are specifically designed to boost investment and accelerate job creation in those nations. In our globalized world, the U.S. lags behind other major economies with our highest-in-the-world corporate tax rate. But little progress has been made to fix it, or to adopt a competitive territorial system that would match countries like the U.K., Canada, and Japan that all have made the switch successfully.
Read the article and let us know what side of the debate you come down on.
TechWonk Blog - Debating Tax Reform
Debating Tax Reform
July 17, 2012
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View all posts by Bret Wincup