Why Africans Starve
by
Paul Craig Roberts
by Paul Craig Roberts
War
and drought are the standard explanations for starving Africans.
War and drought definitely take their toll. But so do tax rates.
Jude
Wanniski has taken a look at taxation in Ethiopia. This is what
he found.
A
farmer who earns $68 a year after expenses from cash sales of a
crop is taxed 10%. Once a farm’s annual income passes the $4,235
mark, additional income is taxed at 89%. Wanniski wonders if such
a tax system wouldn’t cause Ethiopians to starve in the absence
of war and drought.
Desperate
for tax revenues, the Ethiopian government is blind to the incentive
effects. Wanniski reports that there is a 150% excise tax on beer,
80% on soft drinks, 75% on tobacco, 100% on fuel, and so on. In
addition, there is a 15% value added tax. With such gargantuan sales
taxes, a poor country’s commerce is snuffed out.
Examining
Ethiopian income taxes, Wanniski found that the rates apply to monthly
salaries. Consequently, an Ethiopian is taxed even if he is out
of work for most of the year and his average monthly income is below
the threshold. Moreover, there are no personal deductions. Gross
income is taxable income.
These
tax rates on 67 million Ethiopians produce $1 billion in annual
revenues, of which $125 million services Ethiopia’s debts to the
IMF and other foreign lenders.
Many
things are wrong with this picture. Ethiopia is in the revenue minimizing
range of the Laffer curve. Even the IMF must know this.
The
IMF is supposed to advise debtors about economic policy. In Ethiopia,
as elsewhere, the IMF has failed.
In
Zimbabwe, a 45% tax rate strikes enterprise dead when annual incomes
reach about $500 with a 30% surtax on top of the 45% (see www.wanniski.com).
A
person might think that the Congressional Black Caucus would lead
the charge for more realistic taxation. Alas, addicted to handout
politics at home, the Black Caucus agitates for more foreign aid
to Africa which means more government funds for warring factions
to fight over.
Africa
is dying, because Western policymakers are still carrying on their
war against Reaganomics. Stagflation rising inflation and unemployment offered
control-minded policymakers the chance to tighten their grip on
economies by regulating prices and incomes in order to combat stagflation.
But along came President Reagan, who used supply-side economics
to reverse the policy mix and to cure stagflation.
The
Reagan revolution was repeated in England, where Prime Minister
Thatcher slashed marginal tax rates, and in France and Italy, where
socialized industries were privatized.
Economies
escaped from the clutches of the control-minded, an offense for
which Reagan is not forgiven.
Many
Western policymakers place greater value on a more equal distribution
of income than they place on economic growth. For them, high tax
rates are a desirable tool. They are willing to sacrifice greater
income and tax revenue growth in order to narrow income differences.
The
controversial CBS program on Reagan is a propaganda attack designed
to destroy Reagan’s success in order to restore belief in government
solutions. Neoconservatives, with their goal of American Empire,
are helping the leftwing to revive "big government religion."
In
this atmosphere Africans are likely to be sacrificed. Giving Ethiopians
a Reaganite policy prescription would conflict with the desire to
extirpate Reagan’s influence.
If
tax policy allowed Africans to make money, there would be less incentive
for Africans to fight over who controls the government in order
to pocket the revenues. Wars would diminish as alternative sources
of wealth arose, making it less of a life and death matter to have
control of the government.
Westerners,
however, believe that sending food aid is a surer display of compassion
than exporting Reagan’s tax policies. The food aid, of course, subsidizes
war. The recipient government uses the aid to feed its supporters,
while allowing its opponents to starve.
This
seems to be Robert Mugabe’s plan in Zimbabwe. His attack on white
farmers disguises that his real target is his black opposition.
Now
that Mugabe has destroyed the farms that fed the country and provided
export earnings, famine looms. Food aid will enable Mugabe to nourish
his supporters while starving the opposition. The compassionate
Western donors will be complicit in an act of genocide.
But
Western policymakers will be saved the pangs of bad conscience by
their refusal to recommend Reagan policies "that benefit the
rich."
November
5, 2003
Dr. Roberts [send him mail]
is John M. Olin Fellow at the Institute for Political Economy, Senior
Research Fellow at the Hoover Institution, Stanford University,
and Research Fellow at the Independent Institute. He is a former
associate editor of the Wall
Street Journal and a former assistant secretary of the U.S. Treasury.
He is the co-author of The
Tyranny of Good Intentions.
Copyright
© 2003 Creators Syndicate
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