- Nov 14, 2003
- 9,811
- 110
- 106
I just don't get it.
The argument I hear: company will make less money, so we won't afford as many employees. By firing some of those employees we can save money and get back to our pre-price increase revenue.
What I don't get: if the company can fire people and increase revenue with no negative side effects, why isn't the company doing it already without the tax increase? If firing a guy gives you more money at the increased tax rate, at the existing (lower) tax rate firing a guy will get you even more money, since it won't be taxed as much.
The argument I hear: company will make less money, so we won't afford as many employees. By firing some of those employees we can save money and get back to our pre-price increase revenue.
What I don't get: if the company can fire people and increase revenue with no negative side effects, why isn't the company doing it already without the tax increase? If firing a guy gives you more money at the increased tax rate, at the existing (lower) tax rate firing a guy will get you even more money, since it won't be taxed as much.
