It's hilarious to see someone describe one of my posts as "long-winded," and then try to rebut it with the copy & paste of an even longer-winded screed written by a far left-wing IYI economist! (Dean Baker)
Baker is essentially a junior varsity version of Paul Krugman -- not as well known as Paul, but equally prolific in the art of proposing bad economic policy and investment-disincentivizing, economic growth-impeding tax proposals.
First, Baker was one of the loudest cheerleaders in 2021 for the idea of raising the capital gains tax rate to the Biden administration's 43.8% goal. Apparently he's completely ignorant of how badly the push to a 40% rate backfired in the 1970s.
Second, his proposal for corporate taxation is, if anything, even worse:
https://news.bloombergtax.com/daily-...-stock-returns
Got that? This is nothing more than a tax on unrealized gains (as well as yet another tax on dividends), although the author insinuates that the company, rather than the stockholder, would actually pay the tax. (Although at the end of the day, shareholders, employees, and consumers will pay the tax, no matter how it's designed -- just as they do now.) And we've already discussed in detail what a terrible idea taxing unrealized capital gains is.
Despite Baker's statement to the contrary, this plan would encourage private companies to stay private, not go public.
Yet ridiculously bad ideas such as these typify what passes for reasoned debate in today's progressive world.