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The historic Tax Reform Act of 1986, though it achieved the supply side goal of lowering individual income tax rates, was a startlingly progressive reform. The plan imposed the largest corporate tax increase in history --an act utterly unimaginable for any conservative to support today. Just two years after declaring, "there is no justification" for taxing corporate income, Reagan raised corporate taxes by $120 billion over five years and closed corporate tax loopholes worth about $300 billion over that same period. In addition to broadening the tax base, the plan increased standard deductions and personal exemptions to the point that no family with an income below the poverty line would have to pay federal income tax. Even at the time, conservatives within Reagan's administration were aghast. According to Wall Street Journal reporters Jeffrey Birnbaum and Alan Murray, whose book Showdown at Gucci Gulch chronicles the 1986 measure, "the conservative president's support for an effort once considered the bastion of liberals carried tremendous symbolic significance." When Reagan's conservative acting chief economic adviser, William Niskanen, was apprised of the plan he replied, "Walter Mondale would have been proud."
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What does the news that G.E. made clever use of loopholes to avoid paying any taxes last year have to do with the current budget showdown in Washington? Quite a lot, actually.

G.E.'s enviable situation is just the most recent reminder of a worrying trend: the decline in corporate tax revenues. As this chart shows, they've plummeted from more than 6 percent of GDP in the early 1950s to around 1.5 percent today.

That's thanks in part to the increasingly sophisticated methods that companies like G.E. have come up with to minimize their tax burden--including shifting their headquarters to low-tax havens like the Caribbean and Switzerland. Indeed, University of Massachusetts economist Nancy Folbre points to a 2008 report by Congress's Government Accountability Office which found that 83 out of the 100 largest publicly traded companies in the United States had subsidiaries in jurisdictions listed as tax havens.
http://news.yahoo.com/s/yblog_...orporate-tax-revenue

It doesn't matter what the tax rate is officially if there are loopholes bought by campaign cash. The ability to hide money offshore has been around for decades.

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