Why do you want him to pay more tax? Do you like class warfare? What does a rich person do with money not spent on consumption? Unless he stuffs it in a mattress, he invests it or saves it. What becomes of the money then? It is turned into jobs, and increases the tax base. You fail to look at the big picture. All you see is that even though everyone is doing better, if a rich guy isn't doing worse, it's not worth it. If we can increase the velocity of money without increasing the money supply, we will have a booming economy.
Originally Posted by CuteOldGuy
As Lustylad noted in the post immediately below the one I quoted above, you completely missed the point.
First, when did I say I "want" anyone to pay more tax? And what could possibly give you the idea that I "like class warfare?" Surely you must remember from many discussions over the years (in which you participated) that I am in favor of keeping the burden of capital gains taxation as low as is politically practicable, and that incentives do matter. I hardly fit the profile of a "class warrior."
Second, unless you misspoke or I fundamentally misunderstand what you are trying to say, you seem to believe that any money not taxed, and instead saved or invested, somehow is automatically "turned into jobs" and "increases the tax base." But that's not how the economy works. True, an increase in savings boosts aggregate liquidity in the economy and the pool of available capital. However, the economy is now characterized by liquidity preference and is virtually awash in savings. You will note that yields all across the curve are still at near-record lows.
Virtually the entire world is oversupplied with productive capacity, and a consequence is that VCs and investors like me are experiencing quite a dearth of opportunities that we deem worth the risk. Under such conditions, it's difficult to argue that further tax cuts would stimulate the economy to any appreciable degree. There's a lot more to it than that. You urge that one envision the "big picture." Yes, I agree. For starters, note that tax policy changes never operate in a vacuum; they are up against an entire backdrop of conditions in which they operate.
Third, how in the world do you think you can bring about an increase in the velocity of money under present circumstances just by implementing a big tax cut? Again, that's simply not how the economy works. Additionally, note that an unprecedentedly massive quantity of liquidity has been sitting around in idle reserves.
Of course, all tax reductions or increases, if pursued to a sufficient extent, are likely to have some effect on economic activity. It's all about trade-offs, as well as what's political doable. As anyone who examines the issue can easily see, the most obvious feature of the FairTax is that it would amount to a very large tax cut for affluent taxpayers. If you don't want to balloon our already large deficit to gargantuan proportions -- and given many previous posts, I don't get the idea that you favor running trillion-dollar deficits -- someone else is going to have to pick up the slack.
There is no free lunch. The burden of taxation has to land somewhere.
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