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Not The Power To Destroy: An Effects Theory Of The Tax Power, Robert D. Cooter, Neil Siegel Dec 2011

Not The Power To Destroy: An Effects Theory Of The Tax Power, Robert D. Cooter, Neil Siegel

Robert Cooter

The Supreme Court of the United States requires a tax power jurisprudence that is consistent with its restrictions on the Commerce Clause. Otherwise Congress could “tax” its way around any judicially enforceable limits on the commerce power. Existing case law, however, does not offer such jurisprudence. This paper provides the missing theory by analyzing constitutional text, structure, history, and precedent with help from economics. The key difference between a tax and a penalty turns on the effects of the exaction. Taxes raise revenues because they dampen behavior without preventing it for many people. Penalties, by contrast, raise little or no …


Solomon’S Knot: How Law Can End The Poverty Of Nations, Robert D. Cooter, Hans Bernd Schaefer Dec 2011

Solomon’S Knot: How Law Can End The Poverty Of Nations, Robert D. Cooter, Hans Bernd Schaefer

Robert Cooter

In the modern world, nations are relatively poor because their economies fail to grow. Compared to sustained growth, other sources of wealth are insignificant. Sustained growth comes from innovations like a better computer program in Silicon Valley, an improved assembly line in Sichuan, or a new export market for leather in Swaziland. Whether in technology, organization, or markets, a new idea requires money for its implementation. Uniting ideas and capital is a problem of trust. The innovator must trust the investor not to disseminate the idea, and the investor must trust the innovator not to steal the money. We call …