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What is the value


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2012 Dec 21, 10:22pm   43,598 views  100 comments

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41   Meccos   2012 Dec 25, 5:19am  

The Professor says

SoftShell says

The Professor, in essence, is saying once you reach XXX dollars, it turns from "making more" to "exploitation".

Nope. Not what I said or meant.

If you can make a product or provide a service that is useful to humankind you deserve to be handsomely rewarded.

If so then you need to make this distinction rather than just generalizing the rich which is what happens on this form alll the time. The problem is that you and others are not very clear on this distinction and generalize all the rich as rent seekers.

42   Meccos   2012 Dec 25, 5:27am  

Define specifically who these rent seeking exploiters are, rather than generalizing them as the rich and I guarantee you that you will have less people oppose your views

43   Meccos   2012 Dec 25, 11:17am  

The Professor says

Meccos says

Define specifically who these rent seeking exploiters are

You want names?

No but if you are making accusations about a group of people then I would think you can be more specific than blaming "the rich". After all "the rich" is a very ambiguous term and quite arbitrary as we have all seen on th is forum.

44   taxee   2012 Dec 25, 11:55am  

I suspect the truth of the matter is that most rent seeking was/is being done now in the name of retired working people unbeknownst to and uncontrolled by them, through pension funds and annuities via MBS that were created by crooks to exploit both home buyers and pensioners. Now the poor fed has to buy all those homes with their keyboard to save the old folks. You couldn't make this stuff up.

45   Nobody   2012 Dec 27, 4:53am  

The Professor says

How much wealth and power does an individual need?

That's a dumb question. Have you ever heard of a term "Hoarding?"

46   Nobody   2012 Dec 27, 4:55am  

When FEDs implemented QE, we should have increased the tax. When you make that much US$, we should have known that most of it will just go to the top 1%. And top1% will use that money to extract more money from the rest.

I am surprised to realize that not many people know the phrase "Mo money gets Mo money."

47   Meccos   2012 Dec 27, 11:41pm  

The Professor says

Nobody says

Have you ever heard of a term "Hoarding?"

I do it myself. I call it investing for retirement, but not by exploiting my fellow!

So. What is it that you do differently from the top 5% that you criticize? Please tell me specifics and also evidence to back this up. And I don't want to hear about the billionaires since they are not the 5% nor even the 1%...but rather the .01%.

48   Y   2012 Dec 28, 12:02am  

There's not a single form of investment that, when broken down into individual components, cannot be traced back to some kind of human exploitation...

Maybe what you really mean is the 'degree' of human exploitation..

The Professor says

Nobody says

Have you ever heard of a term "Hoarding?"

I do it myself. I call it investing for retirement, but not by exploiting my fellow!

49   Robber Baron Elite Scum   2012 Dec 28, 1:30am  

why don't we tax the peasants?

50   Y   2012 Dec 28, 1:42am  

How can you achieve this without someone being exploited?

The Professor says

SoftShell says

Maybe what you really mean is the 'degree' of human exploitation..

Nope. From the slave labor in China to the renter in America ALL exploitation should be stopped.

Humankind should be able to get together and solve the worlds problems.

Call me naive, ignorant, or stupid, I prefer "Idealist".

51   Peter P   2012 Dec 30, 3:16am  

Yep. This is why I support having a wealth tax instead of an income tax. The most practical form of wealth tax is the Land Value Tax because you cannot hide real properties.

If government is the protector of wealth, tax can be seen as a form of insurance premium.

52   Peter P   2012 Dec 30, 3:19am  

All morality arguments of taxation are based on the false assumption that equality is a virtue. This could be an artifact of democracy. In the end, we will get mediocrity.

No. We are NOT equal. Even if we are all equal, some will always be more equal.

It is either men exploiting men, or the other way around.

53   FortWayne   2012 Dec 30, 9:14am  

Equal sharing of misery is not a value nor a good goal to achieve.

54   Patrick   2012 Dec 30, 9:22am  

Peter P says

Yep. This is why I support having a wealth tax instead of an income tax. The most practical form of wealth tax is the Land Value Tax because you cannot hide real properties.

If government is the protector of wealth, tax can be seen as a form of insurance premium.

I agree!

A 2% annual tax on wealth alone could replace all income tax, all sales tax, and all other taxes.

2% is not too much to ask in return for hiring armed peasants (police, judicial system, national guard) willing to shoot at unarmed peasants to protect 98% of your wealth.

Especially if your investment income exceeds 2%.

55   Entitlemented   2012 Dec 30, 10:10am  

Since in the past generation the US has slowed in R&D and manufacturing, the effects of the contributors kicking up to the rim of Champagne glass are the root cause of the malaise, not the wealthy.....

56   Dan8267   2012 Dec 30, 11:10am  

The Professor says

How about we take 10% a year of everything over $10,000,000 in accrued wealth from the upper class? When their wealth fell below ten million they would still have enough to live fairly comfortably.

The problem isn't that some people have vast amounts of wealth. The problem is how those people got those vast amounts of wealth. The richest in our society become that rich by stealing wealth from the rest of us. The theft is legal, because the wealthy make the laws, but it's theft nonetheless. The problem is that their parasitic activities impoverish the rest of us.

For the few wealthy that made their money by inventing something or entertaining, those rich do not impoverish us and so there is no reason to begrudge them their riches. Those few wealthy actually increase our wealth as well.

But for the vast majority of the ultra-wealthy, their wealth comes from zero-sum games that cost the rest of us. The answer isn't to tax them. Under your proposal, those people would simply wastefully spend all money they acquire over the ten million on absurd luxuries. No, the answer isn't to tax them. The answer is to prevent those parasites from siphoning off our wealth in the first place. Those parasitic wealthy should not even exist in the first place.

57   Meccos   2012 Dec 30, 3:05pm  

@Dan8267

I 100% agree with your post above...

58   oliverks1   2012 Dec 30, 3:56pm  

Meccos says

If one's goal is to make more and more, is there anything wrong with that?

Is snorting more and more coke a good idea? Could there be an addiction here?

59   FortWayne   2012 Dec 31, 12:51am  

Dan8267 says

The problem isn't that some people have vast amounts of wealth. The problem is how those people got those vast amounts of wealth. The richest in our society become that rich by stealing wealth from the rest of us. The theft is legal, because the wealthy make the laws, but it's theft nonetheless. The problem is that their parasitic activities impoverish the rest of us.

That's our government, an old boys club that takes care of the old boys club taxing, stealing, plundering the working people. That's the real welfare state of America.

They work for a few years and get their salary for a lifetime by taxing the rest of us to pay for their lavish lifestyles.

60   Dan8267   2012 Dec 31, 12:53am  

The Professor says

Agreed. But how?

There are a number of structural changes that we can make to eliminate financial parasitic behavior. No single change will solve the problem, and the fight is to a certain extent an arms race, but here are a few changes that will significantly improve things and greatly reduce parasitic behavior.

Change 1: Captain Gains Tax

Capital gains on anything should be set with the following formula.
taxRate = 1.00 - 0.01 * floor(numberOfMonthsCommodityIsHeld)

This simply formula would have prevented the Dot Com Bubble, the Housing Bubble, and the Second Great Depression. It would also prevent most financial parasitic behavior including the extremely dangerous practice of microtrading, holding assets for nanoseconds in order to manipulate the market.

The Goldman Sachs of the world would not be able to do nearly as much damage if this single change were made.

Change 2: Enforce Anti-Trust Laws

Any company that is too big to fail is, by definition, too big to exist. All banks that got the $16 trillion in interest free loans should be nationalized and all profits from them should go back to paying back the tax payer and dollar holder via paying off the national debt and offsetting the inflation of the past 10 years with an equal amount of deflation. These banks can be denationalized by liquidating them and selling the assets to smaller, more responsible banks.

Any other company that is too big to fail or gets too big to fail should be broken up into smaller companies. Company mergers/buyouts should not be allowed if a company has more than 1% of the market share of any industry.

Change 3: Tax the land, not the house.

A 6% tax on the value of land would stop parasites, including banks and real estate investment firms, from hording land and preventing its productive use.

I personally don't believe in taxing the buildings as that discourages production of high quality, valuable buildings, but if buildings are to be taxed, they should be taxed equally as opposed to the policies in states like Florida that tax younger people more than older people.

Change 4: Eliminate all deductions from all income taxes.

Do not lower the tax rates, just eliminate all deductions. Do not replace an income tax with a sales tax.

Eliminating these deductions will prevent the richest corporations and individuals from paying an effective lower rate than the middle class.

Change 5: Apply income taxes after capital gains taxes rather than instead of it.

Any income from capital gains should be taxed at income tax levels after the capital gains tax has been applied. This will prevent capital from devouring everything like a black hole. Right now, capital makes itself necessary by sucking all available capital. It's a positive feedback system that benefits those who do not have to produce anything while enslaving those who do produce wealth, the middle class.

61   Dan8267   2012 Dec 31, 12:57am  

FortWayne says

They work for a few years and get their salary for a lifetime by taxing the rest of us to pay for their lavish lifestyles.

How would you feel about a nationwide 1.5% and 25 cents per transaction sales tax?

62   FortWayne   2012 Dec 31, 1:19am  

Dan8267 says

How would you feel about a nationwide 1.5% and 25 cents per transaction sales tax?

I like that idea, but...

Would that replace existing taxes in CA? Because here we have some really high costs of doing business. I'm not talking about high sales taxes or income taxes alone, I'm talking about all the other fees and levies that make hiring someone full-time almost impossible without going bankrupt.

It's why we all hire Mexicans out here, cost of hiring in CA is tremendous.

63   Patrick   2012 Dec 31, 1:33am  

Dan8267 says

Enforce Anti-Trust Laws

Any company that is too big to fail is, by definition, too big to exist. All banks that got the $16 trillion in interest free loans should be nationalized and all profits from them should go back to paying back the tax payer and dollar holder

I'd like to see that, but it cannot happen while corporations can continue to buy politicians.

The fundamental problem is our campaign finance system, where our supposed representatives actually represent those who give them the money to get elected.

And why should any of our elected representatives want to change the system that got them elected? That's the corner we're in.

Theodore Roosevelt recognized this back in 1912:

"To destroy this invisible government, to dissolve the unholy alliance between corrupt business and corrupt politics is the first task of the statesmanship of the day."

http://teachingamericanhistory.org/library/index.asp?document=607

But the problem has never been fixed. How can we really fix it?

64   Trifle   2012 Dec 31, 2:18am  

Why don't we take this one step further? Why stop with the US? Do you realize that as American wage earners most of us make more than 90% of the rest of the world? Is this really fair? Did we really EARN this money? Wouldn't it make more sense to just transfer most of our wages to the rest of the world so we can all live on world average salaries. Most of the world hates us, not because of our rich, but because of our rich wage earners. Think of the goodwill wage redistribution will bring our country. not to mention the peace, freedom, and opportunity across the globe. We've got to stop being selfish and start thinking about other people.

65   Dan8267   2012 Dec 31, 2:30am  

FortWayne says

Dan8267 says

How would you feel about a nationwide 1.5% and 25 cents per transaction sales tax?

I like that idea, but...

Would that replace existing taxes in CA?

No, it would just be a tax to ensure lavish lifestyles for a few people. It would not be used to provide any service.

66   Dan8267   2012 Dec 31, 2:33am  


I'd like to see that, but it cannot happen while corporations can continue to buy politicians.

The fundamental problem is our campaign finance system, where our supposed representatives actually represent those who give them the money to get elected.

All true. And that is why it will take some kind of revolt, violent or not, from the masses to stop this parasitic system.

The only non-violent solution I can think of is for all the pissed off people to start a new political party, to get that party elected in local government, and work up the chain of power to the senate and house. It's impossible now to change Washington without direct force from the outside. You cannot change the system from within the system because the system is built to be a stable stronghold for parasites.

67   Dan8267   2012 Dec 31, 2:34am  

The Professor says

Dan8267 says

There are a number of structural changes that we can make to eliminate financial parasitic behavior.

Double like! Awesome post!

Now, how can we get the oligarchy to agree to these changes?

From the bottom up, not from the top down.

68   Dan8267   2012 Dec 31, 2:41am  

Trifle says

Why stop with the US?

Because that is where our sovereignty stops. I would not favor a world government. Too much power in too few hands.

Trifle says

Do you realize that as American wage earners most of us make more than 90% of the rest of the world?

Yes. Do you realize that this statistic is entirely meaningless? The purchasing power of a dollar bill in China, where most of the laborers are, is far more than the purchasing power of the same dollar bill in your town or city. As such, comparisons of wages between societies is utterly meaningless and misleading.

Now, comparing the quality of life can be done in a meaningful way, and America's quality of life is better than these developing nations, but it would take far more drastic measures for us to positively affect that quality of life. Here is one way to do so.

Set the total compensation an executive can receive in one year to the median total compensation received by his employees. Include overseas employees, contractors, etc. as employees for this purpose.

This completely changes the game. Now the executives cannot exploit the workers because doing so diminishes his own income. The executive still has motivation to maximize per employee production since doing so maximizes his income. But the executive has no motive to use employees for non-productive uses or to reduce the labor force. Economies of scale will ultimately determine how many employees are hired for a particular company.

Of course, the big question is how could one pass or enforce such a measure when the politicians are already the whore slaves of these very executives?

69   Y   2012 Dec 31, 2:50am  

As long as I can throw m&m's at the heads of the peasants whilst I dine on bleu cheese encrusted filet mignon ....i'm good to go.

Dan8267 says

The Professor says

Dan8267 says

There are a number of structural changes that we can make to eliminate financial parasitic behavior.

Double like! Awesome post!

Now, how can we get the oligarchy to agree to these changes?

From the bottom up, not from the top down.

70   Dan8267   2012 Dec 31, 2:53am  

SoftShell says

As long as I can throw m&m's at the heads of the peasants whilst I dine on bleu cheese encrusted filet mignon ....i'm good to go.

The peasants like M&Ms, so I doubt anyone would complain.

71   Meccos   2012 Dec 31, 3:00am  


I'd like to see that, but it cannot happen while corporations can continue to buy politicians.

This is in essence, the root of the problem. As long as politicians can be bought, there will be no solution.
Although this discussion stated out with the argument for taxing "the rich" I am glad what a few here have eloquently made the distinction between "the rich" and "the parasitic rich or the exploiting rich", as these are completely different.
As many of you have seen from my previous post, I am a staunch defender of "the rich". If they earned their wealth, in my opinion, they deserve to keep it. However I do not defend people who exploit and practice parasitic lifestyles. I would challenge everyone here to make this distinction as it is important. Stealing is stealing, whether it is the rich stealing from the poor or the poor stealing from the rich...

72   Dan8267   2012 Dec 31, 3:17am  

Meccos says

So the executives would receive less than half their employees?

If they executives don't like that, they can always increase their income by mining the ore themselves, or spending 70 hours a week writing code, or manning the french fryer. I'm sure we can find some worker who would gladly take the place of the executive. Pay isn't the only difference between the jobs of executives and their employees.

But even if we adjusted the executive pay to say 1.5 or 2.0 times the median income, the principle is the same. There is no justification for executive pay being 100+ times the median wealth producer pay. Executives are, at best, overhead. They produce nothing.

73   Meccos   2012 Dec 31, 3:41am  

Dan8267 says

Meccos says

So the executives would receive less than half their employees?

If they executives don't like that, they can always increase their income by mining the ore themselves, or spending 70 hours a week writing code, or manning the french fryer. I'm sure we can find some worker who would gladly take the place of the executive. Pay isn't the only difference between the jobs of executives and their employees.

Dan,

YOu realize that we can make the same argument about the workers also. If they dont like the pay, they can just go find another job. The problem your argument is that the average worker is much easier to replace than the average executive. You can find millions of people who can fry french fries, but you cant find millions of people who can run multi-million dollar companies. in addition, I bet most executives work more hours than the average worker... most probably do work 60-70 hours.

Dan8267 says

Meccos says

So the executives would receive less than half their employees?

But even if we adjusted the executive pay to say 1.5 or 2.0 times the median income, the principle is the same. There is no justification for executive pay being 100+ times the median wealth producer pay. Executives are, at best, overhead. They produce nothing.

I agreed with you and again I agree with you that executive pay is outrageous at times. WIth that said, you have no right to dictate pay in a private company. Secondly, executives do produce. Just because they do not directly produce the products or services themselves, does not mean they are not productive. This is the same as an analogy to football. Just because the coach is not throwing or running the football, it does not mean he is not productive.

74   Dan8267   2012 Dec 31, 4:12am  

Meccos says

WIth that said, you have no right to dictate pay in a private company.

It would not be me dictating the pay, it would be the state, obviously. And the state does have the legal right to dictate pay. It does this all the time in the form of the minimum wage and garnishing wages.

Meccos says

Just because they do not directly produce the products or services themselves, does not mean they are not productive. This is the same as an analogy to football. Just because the coach is not throwing or running the football, it does not mean he is not productive.

The analogy between coaching and executive far from perfect. The coach's strategy is clearly part of the product of the game, which is the good produced. The executive financial manipulations are not part of the product produced unless the company is in the financial industry, which produces nothing anyway.

Executives are at best necessary overhead, but overhead should not get the lion's share of the wealth produced by the non-overhead. At worst, executives wreck companies and cost stockholders everything all while extracting vast wealth from the company they are wrecking. The current system actively encourages this.

The very idea that executives are some how more important than the people producing the goods or services is complete nonsense that is perpetuated solely because those at the top of the hierarchy are precisely the ones who get to spend the marketing dollars.

In reality, it is ridiculous that we even use hierarchical structures in our economy. Everywhere in software, hierarchies have been replaced by networks, graphs, and sets. The hierarchical corporation is an archaism in the modern world. Production should be peer-to-peer along a distribution network that itself is managed distributively, much like the Internet.

75   Meccos   2012 Dec 31, 4:22am  

Dan8267 says

And the state does have the legal right to dictate pay. It does this all the time in the form of the minimum wage and garnishing wages.

It dictates minimum pay, but never maximum pay.Dan8267 says

The analogy between coaching and executive far from perfect. The coach's strategy is clearly part of the product of the game, which is the good produced. The executive financial manipulations are not part of the product produced unless the company is in the financial industry, which produces nothing anyway.

Executives only financially manipulate their company? It appears that is what you are implying...
Dan8267 says

Executives are at best necessary overhead, but overhead should not get the lion's share of the wealth produced by the non-overhead. At worst, executives wreck companies and cost stockholders everything all while extracting vast wealth from the company they are wrecking. The current system actively encourages this.

I suppose Steve Jobs was necessary overhead, Bill Gates was necessary overhead.

Dan, you are falling into this trap of generalizing all executives, just like previous posters who generalized all rich people as parasites or exploiters. The fact of the matter is that executives are crucial in the success of any business. Lets not minimize their duties and jobs to make a point.

76   Dan8267   2012 Dec 31, 4:59am  

Meccos says

It dictates minimum pay, but never maximum pay

Hence the mention of garnishing wages.

And yes, government can certainly put pay caps on. There's nothing Unconstitutional about that.

Of course, what I'm talking about isn't even a pay cap, it's marrying the self-interest of the executive to the self-interest of all others in the company. A rising tide raises all boats only if everyone is in the same boat.

Meccos says

Executives only financially manipulate their company?

Not only their company... Executives manipulate a lot of things, but they rarely do something that isn't a zero-sum game today. I have yet to hear a single reason why society or an economy should reward zero-sum games.

Meccos says

Dan, you are falling into this trap of generalizing all executives, just like previous posters who generalized all rich people as parasites or exploiters.

Without generalization, not a single book could ever be written. There is a difference between extracting a general principle and stating that all executives are worthless. I did not say that. I did say that they are at best necessary overhead. But even necessary overhead should not take the lion's share of wealth production by any rational logic.

If a goal of economics is to maximize wealth production, then it makes no sense to strangle the economy by channeling that production away from the producers and towards a few individuals rigging the system. To do so is to discourage productivity all together.

The problem I have with most (not all) executives can be summarized as this... The modern executive is interested in exploiting the producers taking almost everything and leaving only the bare essential for the producer to live on. His greed knows no bounds and his siphoning of wealth harms everyone will providing only a marginal benefit to himself. Even riches have diminishing returns. The executive of today's transnational corporations has become a highly inefficient parasite. Instead of innovating, he stifles innovation with obscene patent laws. Instead of increasing productions, he decreases it to create artificial shortages to drive up prices. Instead of improving efficiency, he exploits and maintains inefficiencies in the system to maximize profits. Instead of working hard, he pits worker against worker to make them work hard for meager scraps. Instead of improving the quality of life, he seeks to make life cheap so he can indulge in extravagances. And then he acts indignant when we do not show adulation for him.

77   Patrick   2012 Dec 31, 5:27am  

Consider a wealth tax instead of an income tax or sales taxes or pay caps. By wealth I mean all land, stocks, bonds, and everything else which is owned in the name of a particular person.

A 2% annual tax on all accumulated wealth, levied monthly as 0.17%, would be sufficient to replace all other taxes and would have these substantial benefits:

* The tax rate on your income would be zero, so working people could very rapidly accumulate assets.
* Vast wealth would also mean vast taxes paid every year, slowing down the formation of hereditary aristocracy.
* It is hard to hide vast wealth, especially land.
* The tax would never reduce anyone's wealth to zero. It would take about 35 years of sitting on uninvested assets for them to be reduced by half - but if your investment income were greater than 2%, you'd gain and never lose.
* It would dramatically reduce paperwork, since incomes and sales would not need to be tracked at all anymore, and land and other asset ownership is already tracked.

78   Peter P   2012 Dec 31, 5:31am  


By wealth I mean all land, stocks, bonds, and everything else which is owned in the name of a particular person.

Let's focus on real properties. Once you start taxing abstract ownerships there will be all kinds of distortions.

79   Y   2012 Dec 31, 7:37am  

This statement is completely idiotic.
The decisions made by the executive branch directly affect the viability of the company.
The decisions made by the workers may affect the quality of a small subset of product in the vast majority of cases.

Dan8267 says

The very idea that executives are some how more important than the people producing the goods or services is complete nonsense that is perpetuated solely because those at the top of the hierarchy are precisely the ones who get to spend the marketing dollars.

80   Patrick   2012 Dec 31, 9:58am  

SoftShell says

The decisions made by the executive branch directly affect the viability of the company.

OK, so why not hire CEOs from India for less than a tenth of what US CEOs are being paid?

Lots of Indians are damn sharp at commerce and willing to work for less. Or the Persians. Also excellent CEO material. Thousands of years of accumulated cultural experience with commerce. Or the Armenians? Really smart and even worse paid in their home country.

Why are only the workers outsourced, and never the executives?

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