设计税收绝对多数要求

Andrew D. Appleby
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引用次数: 1

摘要

各州正在重新点燃广泛的宪法修正案的趋势,这些修正案需要绝对多数同意才能增加或增加税收。这种趋势可能会在不经意间损害各州本已岌岌可危的财政基础,尤其是在一些新的迫在眉睫的支出需求下。然而,各国可以通过适当的绝对多数要求设计,尽量减少负面的经济后果。这篇文章有三个贡献。首先,它考察了广泛的宪法税收绝对多数要求的历史、主张的理由和有效性。这项研究的结论是,第一波和第二波绝对多数浪潮背后的动机与可能的第三波浪潮背后的动机有很大不同。认识到这种新颖的动机——低税收竞争优势的信号——允许本文提出最优的绝对多数条款设计原则。其次,本文调查了几个可以为各州带来巨大税收收入的新来源,但如果设计不当,这可能会受到税收绝对多数条款的阻碍。本文还指出,如果不增加税收或增加税收,就不太可能满足几项支出需求。最后,本文提出了税收绝对多数要求设计原则,实现了强大的低税信号功能,同时允许灵活性保持低税竞争优势。从根本上说,宪法规定的税收绝对多数应该明确包括个人所得税、营业税和手续费,而不包括交易税。如果一个州决定追求广泛的税收绝对多数要求,这些设计原则将使该州处于最有利的位置,既能吸引企业和富人,又能实现财政稳定。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Designing the Tax Supermajority Requirement
States are rekindling the trend of broad constitutional amendments that require supermajority approval to create or increase taxes. This trend may inadvertently harm states’ already precarious fiscal footing, particularly with several new imminent expenditure demands. States can minimize negative economic consequences, however, through proper supermajority requirement design. This Article makes three contributions. First, it examines broad constitutional tax supermajority requirements’ history, asserted justifications, and effectiveness. This examination concludes that the motivations underlying the first and second supermajority waves differ importantly from those underlying the possible third wave. Recognizing this novel motivation—signaling low-tax competitive advantage—allows this Article to present optimal supermajority provision design principles. Second, this Article investigates several new sources that can generate immense tax revenue for states, but that will likely be obstructed by tax supermajority provisions if not designed properly. This Article also identifies several expenditure demands that are unlikely to be satisfied without new or increased taxes. Finally, this Article presents tax supermajority requirement design principles that achieve a strong low-tax signaling function while allowing flexibility to maintain a low-tax competitive advantage. Fundamentally, the constitutional tax supermajority requirement should expressly encompass personal income tax, business taxes, and fees, while excluding transaction taxes. If a state decides to pursue a broad tax supermajority requirement, these design principles will best position a state to attract businesses and wealthy individuals while also achieving fiscal stability.
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