Below are countries which have low, flat income tax; parenthesis is year of introduction.
Note the "tax competition" sweeping eastern Europe.
Kyrgyzstan (2006) 10%
Kazakhstan (2007) 10%
Georgia (2005) 12%
Ukraine (2004) 13%
Russia (2001) 13%
Iraq (2004) 15%
Macedonia (2007) 15%; by 2008, 12%; by 2009, 10%
Romania (2005) 16%
Hong Kong (1947) max 16%
Slovakia (2004) 19%
Jersey and Guernsey (1940) 20%
Estonia (1994) 26%
by 2006 23%; by 2007 22%; by 2008 21%; by 2009 20%
Latvia (1994) 25%
Lithuania (1994) 33%
by July 2006 27%; by 2008 24%
source: World Taxpayers Association (WTA, www.worldtaxpayers.org)
Thanks to Bjorn Tarras-Wahlberg, the Sec-Gen. of WTA.
If the same type of "tax competition" will happen in Asia, then it will supplement the environment of less-regulated economy, at least compared to Europe, and should result in more dynamic economies.
But many Asian governments also aspire to be like the welfare states of Europe, paying less attention to the fiscal burden of such policy and just think more of the votes they can get during elections.
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