Más sobre este tema, de Mark Steyn, creo que vale la pena seguir insistiendo:
Fast forward to the dawn of the Obamacare utopia. In one of a bazillion little clauses in a 2,000-page bill your legislators didn’t bother reading (because, as Representative Conyers explained, he wouldn’t understand it even if he did), Congress voted to subject the 28 percent tax benefit to the regular, good, ol’, American-as-apple-pie corporate tax rate of 35 percent. For the purposes of comparison, Sweden’s corporate tax rate is 26.3 percent, and Ireland’s is 12.5 percent. But just because America already has the second-highest corporate tax in the OECD is no reason why we can’t keep going until it’s double Sweden’s and quadruple Ireland’s. I refer you to the decision last year by the donut chain Tim Hortons, a Delaware corporation, to reorganize itself as a Canadian corporation “in order to take advantage of Canadian tax rates.” Hold that thought: “In order to take advantage of Canadian tax rates” — a phrase hitherto unknown to American English outside the most fantastical futuristic science fiction.
La riqueza es lo que se genera, no lo que existe.
La riqueza – cuando se da el proceso- la genera el sector privado, el estado lo único que hace es sacarles a unos para darles a otros.
La riqueza se genera con inversiones.
Las ganancias de hoy son las inversiones de mañana.
Las prebendas clientelistas nunca las pagan los “ricos” ni “las grandes compañías”. Se traducen inmediatamente en menor generación de riqueza: menos empleo, menores salarios, menores beneficios, menor consumo.
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