kong
Bluelighter
- Joined
- Feb 26, 2006
- Messages
- 1,496
I've said it over and over. Capital gains and regular income should be treated the same. Why should someone who lives off investments be favored over someone who works a regular job? They shouldn't.
You're a Keynsian right? You believe in easy credit correct? Selling stock is just another way companies get a loan, equity instead of interest. Jack up capital gains and the fed will have to loan money at -5% to make up for it.
See the graphs and tables in the first two posts of this thread. They obviously are not paying enough.
Again, read the first two posts in this thread.
We have a lot of billionaires. But on the other hand, 50% of the population earns less than the Australian minimum wage. Wealth isn't something to brag about when it's concentrated in the hands of a small minority of the country.
So what we tax 95% past 1m?
Libertarian solution to all social problems = ignore them
I think we have a pretty good solution to the war on drugs. I'm guessing you voted for Biden the guy who brought us mandatory minimums and the rave act...
Liberal response to fiscal reality-hope human nature suddenly changes.
There is no marginal gain? What about A MILLION DOLLARS a year, and 5% after that? That is a lot of money.
Exactly, there is no *marginal* gain, hence no work after a point. Sorry, rich people (i.e. business owners i.e. half the country to some degree or another) won't provide jobs when they can only keep 5% of their profits.
Whatever. If someone really is going to reject that, I'm sure we could find other people who can do the same job, who will happily accept 1 million a year.
Good luck.
But this is all hypothetical anyway. I'm just making a point. It could be 95% or it could be 50%. I don't really care all that much. I just think it's ridiculous that there can be such a huge disparity in wealth in a country where all people are supposedly created equal.
Which is why I'm not a fan of government contracts I don't have the money to lobby for, the tax breaks I don't have the money to lobby for, the anti-competitive regulation that helps some other guy I don't have the money to lobby for etc...
I believe government enables much of this wealth concentration. The problem is, every program is someone's pet project, everything appeals to some "deserving" constituency. So instead of trying to take other peoples money so I can compete for corruption on an equal level, I'd rather the government didn't do much in the first place.
If all your saying is raise the marginal rate 15% than thats a little different. Fine, we disagree about where we are on the laffer curve. When people get all enraged against wealth its wrong. Its wrong to hate people who are successful. Its wrong to expect your "cut". The only way you can get rid of the power that comes with money and level the playing field is to get the government out of as much as possible.
And sorry, but CEO's and investors aren't worth nearly as much as they are paid. Why should they be paid millions when scientists and doctors are only paid like $100,000? Does the CEO really contribute that much more? Does he create all that wealth on his own? No.
They get paid so much because the organization they run is often huge. As a % of revenue they aren't getting paid near as much as a small business. If there is a huge organization to run it is real important that the absolute best person is hired. (I know, I know...)
Do you know how high our top tax bracket used to be? It was 93% in the 50's. The country was doing really good at that point. It didn't hurt the economy at all.
Thats because hardly anyone paid them.
And nobody knows what the ideal tax rate is, so the laffer curve is basically irrelevant. It says basically nothing besides "don't tax too much, and don't tax too little."
I can tell you what its not...95%