French Prime Minister: “I’m upset that the wildebeest aren’t remaining still for their disembowelment.” |
I predicted back in
May that well-to-do French taxpayers weren’t fools who would meekly sit still
while the hyenas in the political class confiscated ever-larger shares of their
income.
But the new
President of France, Francois Hollande, doesn’t seem overly concerned by
economic rationality and decided (Obama must be quite envious) that a top tax
rate of 75 percent is fair. And patriotic as well!
So I was pleased –
but not surprised – when the news leaked out that France’s richest man was saying
au revoir and moving to Belgium.
But he’s not the only one. The nation’s top actor also
decided that he doesn’t want to be a fatted calf. Indeed, it appears that there
are entire communities of French tax exiles living just across the border in
Belgium.
Best of all, the greedy politicians are throwing
temper tantrums that the geese have found a better place for their golden eggs.
France’s Prime Minister seems particularly agitated
about this real-world evidence for the Laffer Curve. Here are some excerpts from a story in the
UK-based Telegraph.
France’s prime minister has slammed wealthy citizens fleeing the country’s punitive tax on high incomes as greedy profiteers seeking to “become even richer”. Jean-Marc Ayrault’s outburst came after France’s best-known actor, Gerard Dépardieu, took up legal residence in a small village just over the border in Belgium, alongside hundreds of other wealthy French nationals seeking lower taxes. “Those who are seeking exile abroad are not those who are scared of becoming poor,” the prime minister declared after unveiling sweeping anti-poverty measures to help those hit by the economic crisis. These individuals are leaving “because they want to get even richer,” he said. “We cannot fight poverty if those with the most, and sometimes with a lot, do not show solidarity and a bit of generosity,” he added.
In the interests of accuracy, let’s re-write Monsieur
Ayrault’s final quote from the excerpt. What he’s really saying is: “We cannot
buy votes and create dependency if those that produce, and sometimes produce a
lot, do not act like morons and let us rape and pillage without consequence.”
So what’s going to happen? Well, I wrote in September that France
was going to suffer a fiscal crisis,
and I followed up in October with a post explaining how a bloated
welfare state was a form of economic suicide.
Yet French politicians don’t seem to care. They don’t
seem to realize that a high burden of government spending causes
economic weakness by misallocating labor and capital. They seem oblivious
to basic tax policy matters, even though there is plenty of evidence that the
Laffer Curve works even in France.
So as France gets ever-closer to fiscal collapse, part
of me gets a bit of perverse pleasure from the news. Not because of dislike for
the French. The people actually are very nice, in my experience, and France is
a very pleasant place to visit. And it was even listed as the best place in the
world to live, according to one ranking.
But it helps to have bad examples. And just as I’ve used Greece to
help educate American lawmakers about the dangers of statism, I’ll also use
France as an example of what not to do.
P.S. France actually is much better than the United
States in that rich people actually are free to
move across the border without getting shaken down with exit tax
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