World's Major Economies Have High-Tax Handicap: C.D. Howe Institute


TORONTO, Canada, September 20 /PRNewswire/ --     Many of the world's largest economies have a common malady handicapping
their abilities to generate jobs and government revenues, according to an e-
brief released today by the Institute. From the United States, Germany and
Japan, to other engines of the global economy, they tend to have high
corporate income tax rates that blunt their competitiveness, making it harder
for manufacturing and service businesses to adopt better technologies that 
would boost workers' incomes. Except for the United Kingdom, which is 
committed to reducing its corporate tax rate to 28 percent in 2008, most of 
the world's major economies rely on corporate rates in excess of 30 percent
These high rates hurt competitiveness, because when investment moves to low-
tax jurisdictions, prospects worsen for economic growth and job creation
These high tax rates also hurt government revenues, say the authors, Duanjie
Chen, Jack Mintz and Andrey Tarasov.

   The e-brief, "The High-Tax handicap: How the World's major Economies Shoot
Themselves in the Foot with High Corporate Income Tax Rates," is available at
http://www.cdhowe.org/pdf/ebrief_49.pdf.

© PR Newswire Association LLC.

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