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Tuesday, January 19, 2010

Get ready for Generation T There's a huge global government tax bill waiting to be paid in the next decade



We're largely familiar with Generation X and Generation Y. But perhaps it is time to brace for the emergence of another generation in the United States-- Generation T, where T stands for tax.

This group can be described as young Americans, maybe aged 16 to 30, stuck with forking over higher taxes to pay off the debt legislators built up in the years leading up to the great recession, and then allowed to swell substantially in a bid to save the economy from disaster.

The American members of Generation T are likely to be hit with taxes their parents were lucky enough to avoid. Among the types they will get quite acquainted with is the VAT, or value-added tax. Think Canada's GST on a U.S. scale.

Nobody will like it, analysts warn, and protests are bound to bubble. But in the end investors will demand it in return for buying the bucket-loads of bonds Washington has to sell to finance the programs that legislators are reluctant to cut.

"The fiscal situation in the United States is not merely difficult, it is catastrophic," said Andrew Busch, global currency and public policy strategist with BMO Capital Markets. "The projections are just horrendous."

Exacerbating the U.S. scenario is the need to fund the three major entitlement programs -- Medicare, Medicaid and Social Security. Federal spending on these three big-ticket items is set to rise from 8.4% of GDP, at present, to roughly 14.5% by 2030, the Congressional Budget Office has estimated. Meanwhile, revenue will rise only modestly from its present 18.8% level.

Americans won't be the only ones singled out with new widespread taxes. The debt-to-GDP ratios in key developed economies, including Canada's, are set to swell in the coming years. But in the U.S. case, it is projected to reach triple digits -- over 100% in 2012 -- joining the ranks of Japan and Italy.

These growing debts in advanced countries will also put pressure on government imbalances as interest charges to service budget shortfalls will almost double from 1.9% of GDP in 2007 to 3.6% of GDP in 2014.

That has triggered alarm bells among the chattering classes and has prompted some prominent economists, led by Nobel Prize winner Paul Krugman, to predict that a U.S. VAT isn't just probable but inevitable.

"The reality is if you jacked up the corporate rate to the level that Washington needs, all the corporations would leave the U.S.," said Gary Clyde Hufbauer, senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics. "As for jacking up personal rates, you can't do it on the back of just millionaires -- you need to draw deep into the terrain of people, or folks that President Obama said he would never tax."

According to Mr. Hufbauer, the U.S. tax burden will have to climb significantly, from its present level of 18% to 20% of GDP to the mid-20% range.

Tax experts say a VAT is among the least-damaging taxes a government can deploy because it does not tax savings, thereby providing an incentive for people to work harder.

Other tax experts say the VAT's introduction could help fix myriad flaws in the present U.S. tax regime. Leonard Burman, director of the Washington-based Tax Policy Centre and public finance expert with the Urban Institute, said that a large fraction of households -- up to 40% -- do not pay income tax because they don't generate enough in wages or use credits to offset earned income.