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F@ck the Rich — Let’s Tax the $hit out of them


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2007 Jul 19, 8:28am   29,280 views  254 comments

by HARM   ➕follow (0)   💰tip   ignore  

Mmmm... tastes like... pork

We've often had lively debates here at Patrick.net about tax policy (flat tax vs. progressive tax, taxing wages vs. passive capital gains or consumption, what constitutes a "luxury" good vs. "staple" good, framing the inheritance tax as the evil "death tax", etc.).

Personally, I would like a much less complicated and less loophole-ridden tax structure that accomplishes the following economic and social goals, which are important to me:

  • Greatly simplifies the tax system, so fewer resources are wasted on creating, finding and exploiting loopholes, not to mention needless and costly "make work" programs for tax attorneys and accountants.
  • Eliminates needless preferential taxpayer subsidies for profitable industries that don't need any help (oil, gas, big pharma, big agriculture, REIC, etc.), and gradually phases out subsidies for poorly run unprofitable business that should be allowed to fail.
  • Disincentivizes long-term welfare of BOTH kinds: corporate AND individual. About the only long-term "welfare" we should be providing is for the truly handicapped and too-old-to-work elderly. Everyone else should get off their asses, get a job and pay taxes like everyone else. If unemployed (or the country's in recession), you get a temporary helping hand and some job retraining until you're back to work, but that's about it.
  • Disincentivizes subsidies and bailouts for reckless speculators using taxpayers' money. If you want to gamble on your own dime, go for it. But don't come begging to me and other responsible savers for a bailout because you doubled-down on real estate and threw 7s. Tough shit, pal --suck it up and grow smarter like the rest of us.
  • Moderate bias in favor of redistributing wealth away from the idle uber-wealthy (currently growing richer at a phenomenal rate) to the getting-screwed-from-both-ends working class (not illegals or willfully unemployed welfare "queens" or breeding crack addicts, thank you).
  • While these goals are important to me, I recognize that everyone has their own priorities and agenda, which may be different from mine. Although I tend to lean in favor of a (greatly simplified) mildly progressive tax structure that treats all asset classes and income sources equally, and eliminates pretty much all corporate and individual subsidies (call it "Flat Tax Lite"), I'm open to other suggestions. I consider myself a fairly practical, pragmatic person, not so bound to one particular ideology that I'm unwilling to consider reasonable alternatives and/or compromises.

    So, there you go. Have at it.
    HARM

    #housing

    « First        Comments 28 - 67 of 254       Last »     Search these comments

    28   David J   2007 Jul 19, 1:29pm  

    Can someone please get my comment out of moderation.

    29   LurkinLeech   2007 Jul 19, 1:38pm  

    Every time a new law is enacted, I lose another piece of my freedom.

    I am in favor of only one new law:

    "For every new law enacted, 10 old laws have to be eliminated."

    As for the current tax system, and the overall sorry state of affairs, nothing is going to change until enough people quit being so politically apathetic, and get off their fat, stupid, over-consuming rear-ends and do something about it ...

    But I don't see that happening anytime soon, so the small portion of middle class that actually realizes how screwed they are will just have to find a way not play in a game that is so unfairly stacked against them.

    Maybe the founding fathers had a small glimpse of the future, and could foresee how the populace would eventually devolve into lazy, uneducated masses, hence the Electoral College... ;)
    (On the flip side, did they foresee how the uber-rich could eventually just buy the presidency?)

    30   Different Sean   2007 Jul 19, 1:57pm  

    Unionism was an early 'real world' response and reaction to inequality -- it's effectively a way of redistributing wealth in more laissez-faire economies when the govt won't do it through tax schemes or welfare redistribution. Unions empower workers and force the 'owners of the means of production' to return a greater share to the workers (who are actually producing the good) by mass action or the threat thereof. Historically strongly unionised countries like the UK, Australia and possibly Germany have therefore managed to claw their way up to a more egalitarian position in a ranking of welfare states due to leveraging higher wages for their workers.

    31   Brand165   2007 Jul 19, 1:57pm  

    Maybe the Founding Fathers looked around and saw their brave countrymen, fresh from shedding their blood in the name of freedom. And they decided that none of their descendants could possibly end up as lazy, entitled, apathetic or childish about their civic responsibilities.

    By the way, the other reason I'm against penalizing the newly wealthy is because many of them are recent immigrants. If you choke off the supply of hardworking foreigners, then we're going to be *really* screwed.

    32   Different Sean   2007 Jul 19, 2:09pm  

    LurkinLeech Says:
    Maybe the founding fathers had a small glimpse of the future, and could foresee how the populace would eventually devolve into lazy, uneducated masses, hence the Electoral College…

    They already had a mistrust of the uneducated, unwashed masses at that point in time -- it was an inherently elitist system that argued against 'the tyranny of the majority' -- that the average joe in 1776 was uneducated, ignorant, lacked judgement and was out of touch with matters of good govt and realpolitik -- therefore an electoral college of your betters was necessary to act as a check. Modern views of 'pure' democracy would say that this was an unfair artifice. But modern views of what democracy should be don't think highly of 1 seat-1 electorate systems or 'representative democracy' in general either -- rather that all major decisions affecting the polity should go to a referendum -- e.g. did the people of the US as a majority decide to invade Iraq and create a 'Coalition of the Willing' of a few begrudging allies?

    33   Jimbo   2007 Jul 19, 2:27pm  

    ). To punish the exceptional is a naive, jealous approach that will only cause immediate wealth drain.

    What's exceptional about winning the Sperm Lottery?

    34   Brand165   2007 Jul 19, 2:40pm  

    DS says: (the Founding Fathers believed) that the average joe in 1776 was uneducated, ignorant, lacked judgement and was out of touch with matters of good govt and realpolitik

    So basically we haven't moved much in 231 years, huh? :)

    35   Brand165   2007 Jul 19, 2:42pm  

    Brand says: To punish the exceptional is a naive, jealous approach that will only cause immediate wealth drain.

    then Jimbo says: What’s exceptional about winning the Sperm Lottery?

    Jimbo, how much U.S. wealth do you think is hereditary?

    36   B.A.C.A.H.   2007 Jul 19, 2:52pm  

    Many of the "founding fathers" owned slaves.

    One of them fathered children by one of the slaves that he owned. I think we'd call that rape in today's language. Is that what you meant by "founding fathers?"

    Enough about the founding fathers.

    37   Jimbo   2007 Jul 19, 3:04pm  

    Median per capita income in the United States has not been going up for quite a while, not since 1998 or so. And even going all the way back to 1974, as far as I can find, it has only gone up 0.7% per year.

    Unfortunately I cannot find good statistics for any of the European countries. Anyone know where to look?

    38   Different Sean   2007 Jul 19, 3:08pm  

    Jimbo Says:
    Unfortunately I cannot find good statistics for any of the European countries. Anyone know where to look?

    The LIS? Luxembourg Income Study...

    39   Jimbo   2007 Jul 19, 3:09pm  

    Jimbo, how much U.S. wealth do you think is hereditary?

    Most wealthy people in the US are born to wealth. Most of them had the advantages of wealth passed on them by their parents long before they inherited a dime.

    How much US wealth do *you* think is hereditary?

    The answer is not settled by the way and is subject to a great amount of debate between economists.

    40   Brand165   2007 Jul 19, 3:14pm  

    Jimbo: I know a hell of a lot more self-made millionaires than heirs. I would point out that being children of someone rich carries a lot of benefits, but the money source isn't yours until the rich parent dies.

    I would be interested to know what ratio of Americans on the Forbes wealthiest 1000 list are self-made vs. heirs/heiresses.

    41   Randy H   2007 Jul 19, 3:22pm  

    Oh my. And I even used to like Motorhead when I was a teenager.

    I guess now's not a good time to launch into my "eliminate all forms of income and gains taxation" set of irresistibly logical arguments...

    42   Randy H   2007 Jul 19, 3:27pm  

    As someone who made all of my own money by sacrificing many things others choose not to, and further as someone who has been the source of much backfill to parents, aunts and uncles, and siblings, my short answer to this proposal is "No. You'll tax my money out of my cold dead hands".

    I'll translate my money into another currency and ship it off shore if you try to take it from me much beyond the current soaking I get. And no, I'm not kidding.

    When do we get a real fiscally conservative political party again? I'm impatiently waiting.

    43   Jimbo   2007 Jul 19, 3:28pm  

    According to this survey, 44% of the Forbes 400 inherited their wealth:

    http://www.faireconomy.org/press/archive/Pre_1999/forbes_400_study.html

    70% were born to wealthy families.

    I am not saying everyone inherits their wealth, but there is not as much class mobility in the United States as people here like to think. Most of the "self-made" millionaires I know were born to upper-middle class parents, who were professionals of some sort or another. None of them are old enough to have inherited any wealth directly from their parents, but they gained a lot from having an upbringing where their parents were able to give them every advantage, as well as not having to worry about paying for college.

    Mostly I am just bitter though, since I grew up poor and had to pull myself up by my own bootstraps. I guess I shouldn't bitch that much though, since I guess I am one of those "self-made" millionaires myself now.

    44   requiem   2007 Jul 19, 3:42pm  

    No. You’ll tax my money out of my cold dead hands

    That sounds like a vote for an estate tax to me. IMHO not a bad idea; you're letting people keep the fruit of their labor, and helping keep an aristocracy from forming.

    45   Malcolm   2007 Jul 19, 3:46pm  

    If I were designing a tax system, I would include estate taxes for those same reasons. The goal wouldn't be to drain wealth from the Kennedey's but come on, all the arguments against taxes have to diminish somewhat after you're dead.

    46   Malcolm   2007 Jul 19, 3:48pm  

    Inheritance should be taxed as either a gift, or income. I'm not particular either way.

    47   Vicente   2007 Jul 19, 3:50pm  

    Man you guys are taking a thread that started with a pirate flag too seriously.

    I'm still picturing the first 10 minutes of Monty Python's "Meaning of Life", the Crimson Permanent Assurance segment. Reminds me I need to watch YellowBeard again too.

    AVAST, YE SCURVY DOGS!

    48   Malcolm   2007 Jul 19, 3:51pm  

    Jimbo,
    Randy has spoken to this, and I have a similar background to yours. I actually believe not having at some point in one's youth makes you a better manager of wealth later on.

    49   requiem   2007 Jul 19, 3:53pm  

    I should note that one consistent factor I've observed in success was essentially education. There's always the trust fund kids and the blue-collar "worked their way up", but those seem to be the outliers. I think if the goal is to improve class mobility, you need to reach kids in elementary school and make them realize that there are more options in life than "president", "sports star", and "working at the tire shop". This is unfortunately not something free markets are optimized to provide.

    50   Brand165   2007 Jul 19, 3:54pm  

    I'm with ya, Randy. Tax consumption. The more of a burden on society, the more that commodity gets taxed.

    I would have an estate tax, though. Otherwise you'd have people who only ever amassed money and didn't spend it. Although if they didn't spend it, maybe they couldn't exert influence, which would require transfer or consumption...

    51   Malcolm   2007 Jul 19, 3:58pm  

    Who would determine how much of a burden to society something is? Why have a tax that is avoidable by the ones who can afford the tax the most? No matter how creative I get, I can't think of a fairer tax than a progressive income tax.

    52   Different Sean   2007 Jul 19, 3:59pm  

    Estimated average incomes derived partly from per capita GDP. Not a good measure, as they're based on a population mean of GDP, which doesn't say anything about distribution or typical pay packet sizes/actual measured incomes.

    http://www.infoplease.com/ipa/A0934562.html

    also the IMF World Economic Outlook database could be worth a look, but also uses per capita GDP...

    53   Brand165   2007 Jul 19, 4:01pm  

    Who would determine how much of a burden to society something is?

    The elected representatives of the people. Same as always.

    54   Malcolm   2007 Jul 19, 4:03pm  

    OK, so they would go commodity by commodity?

    55   Malcolm   2007 Jul 19, 4:04pm  

    What expertise would a politician have as to the social impact of every commodity?

    56   Different Sean   2007 Jul 19, 4:04pm  

    Bill Gates' dad wrote a book recently recommending estate taxes, and remarking on the legal system of property and ownership that creates the super-wealthy, i.e. once you've got it, no-one can really take it away from you, just ask Paris Hilton...

    Why America Should Tax Accumulated Fortunes, B. Gates Sr.

    57   Malcolm   2007 Jul 19, 4:05pm  

    What about the corruption this then opens up as industry lobbyists fight to counter scientists reporting to legislators?

    58   Malcolm   2007 Jul 19, 4:09pm  

    I don't mean to spar, I've just always hated the concept of consumption taxes, because I've always been cynical about the fact it is normally Republicans who hate income taxes who propose them because they know they are regressive. Just my opinion though.

    59   Randy H   2007 Jul 19, 4:12pm  

    Consumption taxation empowers the people with a say in which behaviors they deem of value. The current system robs me of the chance to tune my behavior according to my own set of ethics and values.

    We covered this ad naseum 2 or 3 threads ago.

    Any "progressive" income tax or even a pure flat income tax is still regressive in terms of valuing productivity. There is no reason to tax my marginal dollar earned at the same or greater rate than the last aside from pure income confiscation and redistribution inevitably to someone who has failed to value productivity -- that includes the lazy poor as well as the lazy rich and the parasite corporation.

    Just tax the damned value chain and consumption and leave income & gains out of it. Period. No one can complain if they are honest about it. Oh no, someone with less money has to pay more of their income to buy something. You don't say. Aside from DS' uncanny ability to alter the foundational theorems of mathematics, one can never avoid such a truism no matter how much you redistribute and reengineer.

    "Progressive" taxation is the original Orwellian concept. It is regressive. Think about it. It really is.

    60   Different Sean   2007 Jul 19, 4:12pm  

    The wholesale sales tax here used to go commodity by commodity, with differing rates of sales tax on each item, similar to import duty systems. The system was replaced by a 'flat', nearly universal goods and services tax (GST) pegged at 10%. The UK VAT is 17½% by contrast, which hurts a lot more as a non-progressive tax. Italy has 5 or 6 different rates, which makes more work re collection and categorisation -- one of the aims of a 'good' or efficient tax system is simplicity. Scrapping a wholesale sales tax on goods allowed the govt to take a slice of the services pie for the first time, however, similar to VAT systems everywhere -- the ratio of cost of goods vs services in society is swinging more towards services all the time... and services are more likely to recur than goods...

    However, the 10% rate is 'fair' in that it is still supplemented by a progressive income tax system. It is harder to avoid such taxes, except for some 'black economy' areas in trades, etc. The tax was lifted on 'unprocessed' foodstuffs, so you could eat basic foods without being taxed.

    61   Randy H   2007 Jul 19, 4:13pm  

    I'm grumpy with Ozzies right now anyway. I always have to have conference calls in the middle of the damned night. Move your damned island to a more reasonable time zone already.

    62   Malcolm   2007 Jul 19, 4:14pm  

    I'm really trying to see it your way, I promise, I just can't make the connection. I do agree with your premise in the first paragraph.

    63   Different Sean   2007 Jul 19, 4:15pm  

    Aside from DS’ uncanny ability to alter the foundational theorems of mathematics

    hmm, and how is progressive regressive? and what final outcome are you regressing to?

    64   Malcolm   2007 Jul 19, 4:22pm  

    Ok Randy, since I know you have achieved some wealth, one could question your motive? We both seem to agree that progressive taxation is OK (I infer this by your stating my system is regressive and bad) so a wealthy person saying he supports a tax that is discretionary to him has to raise a red flag.

    The other part that I struggle with is that I don't want government making a judgement call on every single thing I buy and whether it is good or bad. I think this is a blatant abridgement of basic freedom of commerce.

    65   Malcolm   2007 Jul 19, 4:24pm  

    But nothing is absolute, I don't care about tobacco sin taxes, and all that good stuff, hell even oil taxes, knock yourself out, but it then gets to trans fat oils, and fertilizers and then it doesn't stop.

    66   Different Sean   2007 Jul 19, 4:24pm  

    It all partly depends on whether you see a community as a bunch of atomised, disconnected individuals with only a cash nexus between them, or as an interconnected and interdependent whole, where everyone depends on someone for something. You may also want to recognise basic citizenship rights such as adequate food and clothing and shelter in a society which has a clear abundance or surplus. Once you realise that everyone depends on everyone else -- and the rich depend on everyone else to make them rich, one tiny slice of money at a time -- then the idea of the 'self made' millionaire of course becomes quite ludicrous -- the 'self made' millionaire was able to manipulate others and their economic relations in a way that disproportionately benefitted him or herself at everybody else's expense. Is this to be admired or congratulated? Not particularly, in my book. Australian Aboriginals have no strong sense of personal property, everything is the collective property of the tribe and is exchanged freely on request as the need arises to use it -- which of the two societies is actually more 'advanced'?

    67   Malcolm   2007 Jul 19, 4:28pm  

    Both ultimately tax production if you think about it, so why not take it on the front end, and let people accumulate, and spend as they see fit. I do believe that people spending (not going into debt) is what gets things going so I don't understand why we would discourage it. Just look how people avoid sales taxes now by buying online.

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