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"Europe is becoming a slave economy," warns Arthur Laffer, the renowned economist who laid the groundwork for the Reagan administration's economic policies. Half a century later, he asserts that the tax burden in Europe is effectively killing the incentive to work.
Arthur Laffer became a legend by formulating a fundamental law of taxation on… a napkin. It was September 1974. America was suffocating under stagflation—high inflation coupled with stagnant growth. President Gerald Ford planned to raise taxes to curb the crisis. His advisors, a young Dick Cheney and Donald Rumsfeld, met Laffer and journalist Jude Wanniski at Washington’s Two Continents restaurant to discuss alternatives.
Laffer presented a simple yet radical thesis: raising taxes would not only fail to help but would actively cause harm. Cheney struggled to understand how a government could cut taxes and simultaneously collect more revenue. In response, Laffer grabbed a napkin and sketched a simple graph—two axes and an inverted U-shaped curve.
The premise: a 0% tax rate yields 0% government revenue. The other extreme: a 100% tax rate also yields 0%, because no one will work for free. Somewhere in between lies the optimal rate that maximizes budget inflows. Laffer argued that America sat on the right side of this curve—meaning taxes were so high that further increases would yield diminishing returns. The conclusion? Paradoxically, cutting taxes could increase state revenue by kickstarting the economy.
Cheney was impressed; Rumsfeld kept the napkin as a souvenir. Today, the original resides in the Smithsonian Institution. Wanniski dubbed the graph the “Laffer Curve” and popularized it in the Wall Street Journal. Years later, Laffer’s theories became the intellectual bedrock of Reaganomics—the massive tax cuts that reshaped the American right. More recently, Laffer advised Donald Trump during the 2016 campaign and received the Presidential Medal of Freedom three years later.
The Laffer Curve remains controversial. Critics point out that, in practice, tax cuts rarely “pay for themselves,” citing experiments in Kansas or Louisiana that resulted in budget deficits. Laffer himself admitted he doesn’t recall the exact details of that evening, noting his mother taught him not to scribble on nice cloth napkins. Nevertheless, the story has firmly entered the canon of political economy.
Today, Arthur Laffer still holds strong opinions on economic policy. This time, his sights are set on the Old Continent. Although 50 years have passed, his diagnosis sounds familiar: the tax burden in Europe is too heavy, the state is too large, and the people are losing their drive.
According to the American economist, Europe is “very close to being a slave economy.” This provocative comparison illustrates a system that, in his view, robs citizens and entrepreneurs of the motivation to innovate and take risks. In an interview with the Brussels-based think tank IES Europe, Laffer pulls no punches regarding the European economic model.
His diagnosis is brutally simple: European governments have grown too large and too intrusive. By doing so, they stifle their own growth potential. He views the level of public spending and the complexity of regulations as an inseparable pair—without a radical reduction in the state’s reach, the economy simply cannot flourish.
Laffer argues that heavy taxation creates a system where it is more profitable to administer and redistribute than to actually create value. Entrepreneurs, investors, and even ordinary workers encounter more obstacles than opportunities.
The tax-to-GDP ratio serves as his key metric. “Taxes in Europe should hover around 10% of GDP,” Laffer claims, pointing out that current levels are drastically higher. He argues that high marginal tax rates directly discourage work and entrepreneurship. In an era of global capital mobility, Europe risks seeing its most dynamic individuals and firms simply flee the continent.
What does the economist propose?
Laffer does not entirely negate the role of the state; he acknowledges its function in education, the judiciary, and defense. However, he warns against excessive income redistribution. His theory of transfers states clearly: taxing one group to give to another weakens motivation on both sides. Those who pay see their effort as less rewarding, while those who receive support have less incentive to increase their own productivity. The result may be lower inequality on paper, but at the cost of lower economic growth for everyone.
Interestingly, Laffer allows for exceptions—the taxation of harmful products like tobacco. He advocates for a harm-reduction approach: higher rates for the most dangerous products and lower rates for safer alternatives, such as e-cigarettes or nicotine pouches. The goal should be to encourage consumers to switch to less harmful options rather than punishing the addicted. Here, too, he opposes uniform EU regulations, preferring that member states experiment and adapt based on real-world outcomes.
Ultimately, Laffer’s vision describes a Europe of limited states, low and simple taxes, and fierce competition between nations. His words will undoubtedly provide ammunition for both free-market advocates and opponents of economic liberalism.
Can such a radical vision ever be realized? Even if not, his diagnosis forces a necessary reflection. If the current tax burden in Europe is steering the EU toward the status of a “slave economy,” then it is time for a serious debate about the future of the Old Continent’s social model.
Read this article in Polish: Czy Europa to gospodarka niewolnicza? Legendarny ekonomista ostrzega
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