All posts by Jim Garven

My name is Jim Garven. I currently hold appointments at Baylor University as the Frank S. Groner Memorial Chair of Finance and Professor of Finance & Insurance. I also currently serve as an associate editor for Geneva Risk and Insurance Review. At Baylor, I teach courses in managerial economics, risk management, and financial engineering, and my research interests are in corporate risk management, insurance economics, and option pricing theory and applications. Please email your comments about this weblog to James_Garven@baylor.edu.

End the Corporate Income Tax!

This is one of Megan McArdle’s ideas for “fixing the world”. She goes on to argue that:

“At 35 percent, America’s levy on corporate income is one of the highest in the developed world. In 2007, about 2.5 million companies prepared lengthy returns at great expense, yet the tax generated only about 15 percent of total federal tax revenue. The tax on corporate profits discourages capital formation, targets shareholders regardless of their wealth, and fuels frantic, and costly, business efforts to dodge it. Among experts who study its effects, support for the tax is at best sort of sheepish.”

The risk management literature actually has much to say about how the corporate tax code discourages capital formation.  Specifically, the asymmetric nature of the corporate income tax creates disincentives for firms to bear risk.  Tax asymmetries derive from two important features of the corporate income tax; specifically, tax rate progressivity and incomplete tax loss offsets.  Thus tax asymmetries incentivize firms  underinvest in risky (but potentially profitable) assets, which in turn limits the economy’s prospective growth potential. 

Assorted Links (8/18/2009)

Here’s a list of articles that I have been reading today (organized by topic):

Financial Crisis

Foreign Policy

  • Talking to the Enemy, by Bret Stephens
    WSJ: “We should know better than to talk to the Irans and North Koreas of the world.”

Game Theory

  • How to improve health care using game theory: the Prisoner’s Dilemma, by Presh Talwalkar

Health Care Reform

  • Whole Foolishness
    WSJ
    : “The left boycotts a progressive retailer.”
  • The Panel, by Andrew Klavan
    WSJ: “What death by bureaucratic fiat might look like.”

Politics

  • Harry Reid’s ‘Evil’ Moment’, by William McGurn
    WSJ: “And Democrats wonder why their health plan isn’t selling.”
  • Why Obama’s Ratings Are Sinking, by Arthur C. Brooks
    WSJ: “Americans will put up with a lot. But not with someone who imperils their future.”
  • Young Voters Sought Change, Got Only Stasis, by Michael Barone

Rationing and Rationality

In an article entitled “Rationing and Rationality”, the editorial staff of the National Review Online makes (what I think is) a profound observation concerning the nature of health care rationing:

“The view that medical care should be withheld from people based not merely on the likelihood of success or the cost but on judgments about the quality of their lives is no longer held only by a fringe. Practices that are at best close cousins to euthanasia have become widespread.”