Taxing the rich to fund welfare is Nobel winner’s growth mantra
How do you spur ( ) demand in an economy? By raising direct taxes and distributing the money among the poor, says this year’s winner of the Nobel prize for economics.
Reducing taxes to boost ( ) investments is a myth ( ) spread by businesses, says Abhijit Banerjee, who won the prize along with Esther Duflo of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) and Michael Kremer of Harvard University for their approach to alleviating ( ) global poverty. “You are giving incentives ( ) to the rich who are already sitting on tons of cash.”
Countries from China to India to Indonesia are slashing ( ) taxes for businesses to spur growth amid a gloomy ( ) outlook ( ) for global economic expansion. The International Monetary Fund last month made a fifth-straight cut to its 2019 global growth forecast, pegging ( ) it at 3 percent.
“You don’t boost growth by cutting taxes, you do that by giving money to people,” Banerjee said in an interview on Oct. 21, suggesting that cash in the hands of the poor will drive consumption ( ). “Investment will respond to demand.”
China earlier this year rolled out ( ) tax cuts worth US$280 billion on personal income and corporate ( ) profits, while India surprised with a US$20 billion stimulus ( ), taking its corporate tax rate to among the lowest in Asia. Indonesia also plans to lower tax on companies to 20 percent from 25 percent.
MIT Professor Banerjee spoke in New Delhi where he was promoting ( ) his book Good Economics for Hard Times.
Last year, US President Donald Trump unveiled ( ) a US$1.5 trillion tax package, and has promised “very substantial ( )” tax cuts in 2020 for “middle-income” Americans.
It’s the widening inequality ( ) in developed countries such as the US that has angered people and is pushing the world into a trade war, Banerjee said. “It is unbelievable that in the name of growth you have allowed inequality to explode to this point.”
India Slowdown
Growth in India, Asia’s third-largest economy, has slumped ( ) to a six-year low as consumption is weak, prompting the central bank to cut interest rates to the lowest in almost a decade.
The government complemented ( ) the monetary policy easing with a series of measures to reverse ( ) the demand slowdown. Those steps — including scrapping ( ) a tax on foreign funds to allowing tax concessions ( ) on vehicle purchases — have raised concerns of a fiscal ( ) slippage ( ).
“Given the demand slump it’s not a bad thing for the government to be expansionary,” Banerjee said. “If we want to stimulate demand and corporate tax cut doesn’t do that, which is my prediction, then what do we do.”
諾貝爾經濟學獎得主:「劫富濟貧」是良方
在經濟結構中要如何刺激需求?今年的諾貝爾經濟學獎得主認為,應提高直接稅,並將錢分配給窮人。
Abhijit Banerjee與麻省理工學院的Esther Duflo及哈佛大學的Michael Kremer,以其對緩解全球貧窮問題的研究,共同獲得了今年的諾貝爾經濟學獎。Banerjee表示,用減稅來鼓勵投資,是企業所散播的迷思,減稅「是在獎勵富人,而這些有錢人已是坐擁金山銀山」。
全球經濟前景黯淡,從中國到印度再到印尼都在大幅削減企業稅,以刺激經濟成長。國際貨幣基金上個月將二○一九年全球成長率連續第五次下修,將其定為百分之三。
Banerjee十月二十一日在接受採訪時表示:「促進經濟成長不是透過減稅來達成,而是要給人錢」。這表示,窮人手中的現金才會推動消費,「有需求才會有投資」。
今年稍早,中國對個人所得和企業利潤實施減稅,所減之稅額達兩千八百億美元。而印度則出乎意料地祭出兩百億美元的經濟刺激措施,將印度的公司稅稅率降至亞洲最低。印尼還計劃將公司稅由百分之二十五降至百分之二十。
麻省理工學院的Banerjee教授在印度新德里宣傳其著作《艱困時期的好經濟學》時,做出以上表示。
美國總統Donald Trump去年公佈了一項一點五兆美元的稅務方案,並承諾在二○二○年對「中等收入」的美國人實施「很實質性的」減稅。
Banerjee說,激怒人們,並讓世界陷入貿易戰的,是美國等已開發國家日益擴大的不平等。「令人難以置信的是,你打著經濟成長的名號,卻讓不平等迅速擴大到這個地步。」
印度經濟成長下滑
由於消費疲弱,印度這亞洲第三大經濟體,其經濟成長已跌至六年來最低,使得印度央行將利率調降至近十年來最低。
為了避免因貨幣政策寬鬆所造成的需求放緩,印度政府以一系列措施來做配套。這些措施─包括取消對外資課稅,以及購車稅率優惠─引起了人們對政府財政惡化的擔憂。
Banerjee表示:「由於需求下滑,因此增加政府支出並不是件壞事」。「如果我們要刺激需求,而削減公司稅又如我所料達不到這目標,那我們也別無他法。」
#高雄人 #學習英文 請找 #多益達人林立英文
#高中英文 #成人英文
#多益家教班 #商用英文
#國立大學外國語文學系講師
bank indonesia monetary policy 在 多益達人 林立英文 Facebook 的最讚貼文
Taxing the rich to fund welfare is Nobel winner’s growth mantra
How do you spur ( ) demand in an economy? By raising direct taxes and distributing the money among the poor, says this year’s winner of the Nobel prize for economics.
Reducing taxes to boost ( ) investments is a myth ( ) spread by businesses, says Abhijit Banerjee, who won the prize along with Esther Duflo of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) and Michael Kremer of Harvard University for their approach to alleviating ( ) global poverty. “You are giving incentives ( ) to the rich who are already sitting on tons of cash.”
Countries from China to India to Indonesia are slashing ( ) taxes for businesses to spur growth amid a gloomy ( ) outlook ( ) for global economic expansion. The International Monetary Fund last month made a fifth-straight cut to its 2019 global growth forecast, pegging ( ) it at 3 percent.
“You don’t boost growth by cutting taxes, you do that by giving money to people,” Banerjee said in an interview on Oct. 21, suggesting that cash in the hands of the poor will drive consumption ( ). “Investment will respond to demand.”
China earlier this year rolled out ( ) tax cuts worth US$280 billion on personal income and corporate ( ) profits, while India surprised with a US$20 billion stimulus ( ), taking its corporate tax rate to among the lowest in Asia. Indonesia also plans to lower tax on companies to 20 percent from 25 percent.
MIT Professor Banerjee spoke in New Delhi where he was promoting ( ) his book Good Economics for Hard Times.
Last year, US President Donald Trump unveiled ( ) a US$1.5 trillion tax package, and has promised “very substantial ( )” tax cuts in 2020 for “middle-income” Americans.
It’s the widening inequality ( ) in developed countries such as the US that has angered people and is pushing the world into a trade war, Banerjee said. “It is unbelievable that in the name of growth you have allowed inequality to explode to this point.”
India Slowdown
Growth in India, Asia’s third-largest economy, has slumped ( ) to a six-year low as consumption is weak, prompting the central bank to cut interest rates to the lowest in almost a decade.
The government complemented ( ) the monetary policy easing with a series of measures to reverse ( ) the demand slowdown. Those steps — including scrapping ( ) a tax on foreign funds to allowing tax concessions ( ) on vehicle purchases — have raised concerns of a fiscal ( ) slippage ( ).
“Given the demand slump it’s not a bad thing for the government to be expansionary,” Banerjee said. “If we want to stimulate demand and corporate tax cut doesn’t do that, which is my prediction, then what do we do.”
諾貝爾經濟學獎得主:「劫富濟貧」是良方
在經濟結構中要如何刺激需求?今年的諾貝爾經濟學獎得主認為,應提高直接稅,並將錢分配給窮人。
Abhijit Banerjee與麻省理工學院的Esther Duflo及哈佛大學的Michael Kremer,以其對緩解全球貧窮問題的研究,共同獲得了今年的諾貝爾經濟學獎。Banerjee表示,用減稅來鼓勵投資,是企業所散播的迷思,減稅「是在獎勵富人,而這些有錢人已是坐擁金山銀山」。
全球經濟前景黯淡,從中國到印度再到印尼都在大幅削減企業稅,以刺激經濟成長。國際貨幣基金上個月將二○一九年全球成長率連續第五次下修,將其定為百分之三。
Banerjee十月二十一日在接受採訪時表示:「促進經濟成長不是透過減稅來達成,而是要給人錢」。這表示,窮人手中的現金才會推動消費,「有需求才會有投資」。
今年稍早,中國對個人所得和企業利潤實施減稅,所減之稅額達兩千八百億美元。而印度則出乎意料地祭出兩百億美元的經濟刺激措施,將印度的公司稅稅率降至亞洲最低。印尼還計劃將公司稅由百分之二十五降至百分之二十。
麻省理工學院的Banerjee教授在印度新德里宣傳其著作《艱困時期的好經濟學》時,做出以上表示。
美國總統Donald Trump去年公佈了一項一點五兆美元的稅務方案,並承諾在二○二○年對「中等收入」的美國人實施「很實質性的」減稅。
Banerjee說,激怒人們,並讓世界陷入貿易戰的,是美國等已開發國家日益擴大的不平等。「令人難以置信的是,你打著經濟成長的名號,卻讓不平等迅速擴大到這個地步。」
印度經濟成長下滑
由於消費疲弱,印度這亞洲第三大經濟體,其經濟成長已跌至六年來最低,使得印度央行將利率調降至近十年來最低。
為了避免因貨幣政策寬鬆所造成的需求放緩,印度政府以一系列措施來做配套。這些措施─包括取消對外資課稅,以及購車稅率優惠─引起了人們對政府財政惡化的擔憂。
Banerjee表示:「由於需求下滑,因此增加政府支出並不是件壞事」。「如果我們要刺激需求,而削減公司稅又如我所料達不到這目標,那我們也別無他法。」
#高雄人 #學習英文 請找 #多益達人林立英文
#高中英文 #成人英文
#多益家教班 #商用英文
#國立大學外國語文學系講師
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INTEREST RATE CLARITY AND DOVISH JACKSON HOLE TESTIMONY SHOULD LIFT EQUITY MOOD, KLCI TO REGAIN UPWARD MOMENTUM
[Top Featured Stocks which include the likes of Gamuda, Bursa, IHH, IGB, Sunway, Westports, Fitters, PJDev, Econpile, Pintaras, Sentoria, Huayang, KSL and Matrix.]
Going forward, we expect local market to remain firm, trend higher and gradually retest 8th July 2014 all-time-high of 1896.23 level as traders increased their bets on solid USA economy, dovish Federal Reserve testimony, reduced geopolitical tension and a steady recovery of the world economy. Local stocks should get momentum from world stocks performance (MSCI All World stocks and S&P 500) which recently hit five-year and all-time-high respectively with an impressive gain of 17.6% and 20.7% year-to-date, driven by a round of positive economic data and low interest rate despite the latest commodity volatility and elevated tensions in the Ukraine and Russia. We expect many Asian bourses including Bursa to play catch-up, with MSCI All-World and FTSE All-World equity index rose to its best close since May 2008 following Federal Reserve easy policy continuity and ease of geopolitical tension. There is also another bullish wild card from European Central Bank President Mario Draghi who is scheduled to speak at Jackson Hole. Global equity should get a huge relief rally if ECB hints at the possibility of a USA-like quantitative easing policy, which has been debated in Europe but so far the ECB has declined to pursue. Despite a hawkish tone from last week USA Fed meeting minutes and the collapse of local speculative small cap stocks (Sumatec and PDZ), the local indices should get further rally driven by a measure of strength in German PMI readings that bolstered hope for a modest lift in third-quarter European growth prospects. Investors should take heart from a batch of encouraging global economic data (USA Building Permits, USA Housing Starts, Germany Manufacturing PMI, France Manufacturing PMI, Canada Wholesale Sales), which helped offset hawking Federal Reserve minutes. Investors should have better interest rate clarity on the normalisation of monetary policy after the much awaited Jackson Hole Bankers Central Bankers Conference following the strength of the USA economy and jobs market. On a weekly basis, ringgit saw aggressive moves higher versus the dollar, gaining 5.3% to 3.17 since February 2014, starting its strong upward momentum after being battered down since May 2013. We expect these fresh rounds of foreign dollar injection to slowly push carry trades into higher yield Malaysian market, boosting local asset liquidity specifically Bursa stock market and Malaysian government bonds. On the technical front, we see strength across the board with FBMKLCI remain 2% below record territory supported by Wall Street at new all-time highs and Dow Jones Industrial Average back above the 17,000 psychology level. Studies are showing positive momentum for FBMKLCI but are now in overbought territory, so some caution is warranted. The market's short-term trend is positive on the close above the 20-day moving average. The market has a positive tilt with the close over the 1860 support level. The 9-day Stochastics over 70 indicates the market is approaching overbought levels. The next area of resistance is around 1880 and 1900 levels, while major areas of support hit at 1860 and 1850 levels respectively. We expect the recent upward momentum in equity to continue given the steady follow-through Bursa performance during the last week session. Meanwhile, we expect the following headlines to power up selective play near term sentiment (1) Petronas to give 10.0% stake in Bintulu LNG 9 to Sabah government (2) Brahim willing to sell its stake on Malaysia Airlines request (3) Bumi Armada’s consortium to seal USDD3b oil gas contract deal in Angola (4) Kumpulan Europlus to buy stake in Talam (5) Icon Offshore to bag RM297.0m worth of jobs from Brunei Shell Petroleum (6) Malaysia Airlines to appoint a new top management and (7) Oldtown to open 27 cafes in in Malaysia, Singapore, Indonesia and Australia by end 2015. Overall, the early Bursa edge goes to the bulls, with next target at the 1880 level benefitting from a risk-on vibe across USA and Europe. We reiterate that the FBMKLCI remains above its monthly uptrendline and thus is in a secular bull market. That means any significant periods of weakness this year should be viewed as strong buying opportunities. While local small caps consolidate with buoying sentiment, impressive rotational interest on large and mid-cap blue chips should showcase healthy risk taking with active foreign participation accumulating battered down blue chip stocks. Strategy wise, given that the short term trend has turned positive toward 1880, traders should accumulate our last recommended Top Featured Stocks which include the likes of Gamuda, Bursa, IHH, IGB, Sunway, Westports, Fitters, PJDev, Econpile, Pintaras, Sentoria, Huayang, KSL and Matrix.
Dr Nazri Khan
First Vice President/Head of Retail Strategy, Affin Investment Bank
@ President, Malaysian Association of Technical Analyst (MATA)