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This Article is From Jan 07, 2021

Budget 2021: Dear FM, Listen To A ‘Fiscal Heretic’, Cut Taxes!

Budget 2021: Dear FM, Listen To A ‘Fiscal Heretic’, Cut Taxes!
Union Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman, at Parliament in New Delhi, on Feb. 1, 2020. (Photograph: PTI)

I wonder whether Professor Arthur Laffer has ever visited Mumbai or picked up a smattering of Marathi, the preferred language of the Shiv Sena-led coalition government in Maharashtra? I reckon the answers to my unusual questions would be “no, and no”, but equally, I may have tickled your curiosity enough for you to ask, “what's this guy up to, has he lost it?”. So, let me explain.

Professor Arthur Laffer is a renowned American supply-side economist with Yale, Stanford, Ronald Reagan, and Donald Trump on his resume'. One fine evening in 1974, he was at dinner with Dick Cheney, Donald Rumsfeld, and Jude Wanniski at the Two Continents Restaurant at Washington Hotel. While Laffer doesn't recall his historic flourish, Wanniski insists Laffer drew a distorted bell curve on a napkin to convince his audience that President Gerald Ford's tax hikes would fail, since beyond a point of inflection, tax revenues fall even when tax rates are increased.

Laffer's napkin theory was neither unique nor original. It was propounded six hundred years earlier by Islamic Scholar Ibn Khaldun in Muqddimah, and later endorsed by such worthies as Adam Smith, John Maynard Keynes, and Andrew Mellon. But the legend got fastened on Professor Laffer that fateful evening. The theory's popular inversion that “tax revenues could rise if rates are cut” became known as the Laffer Curve for charismatic converts like President Reagan, who slashed peak taxes from 70% to 28% in 1981 at Laffer's bidding. Several academicians have refuted the Laffer Curve, but that hasn't diminished its sexy appeal for conservative politicians – remember Donald Trump's big slash down to 21%?

Mumbai's Property Market Flies Off The Laffer Curve

So far so good, but what's cooking between Amchi Mumbai and Laffer Curve? Well, if Professor Laffer was looking for a stunning vindication of his theorem, he's got it from the property market in the megapolis. On Aug. 26, 2020, the administration in Mumbai did what few statist Indian governments do, i.e. they hacked the stamp duty on property transfers to kick life into the Covid-dead real estate market. The 5% rate was brutally trimmed to 2% until Dec. 31, 2020.

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