Showing posts with label Income tax. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Income tax. Show all posts

Friday, August 20, 2010

Greed Is Not Good

This will be a short post, but one on a subject that I will return to.  That is my almost biblical aversion to getting rich.  After all the Bible did say that the love of money is the root of all evil
Yet somehow in contemporary America those who become obscenely wealthy are celebrated as great men. (Occasionally women also)
I maintain its actually evidence of deep psychological problems.  The need to have more and more.  The desperate need to prove that mine is bigger than yours. 
So one of the things that would be part of my system of Bounded Capitalism is a graduated income tax. One that if plotted would have an almost hyperbolic curve to it.  So that lower and middle incomes would pay low levels of tax, but at some level- a million dollars for example- the curve would get very steep.
The conservatives would say that this creates a negative incentive to wealth creation.  That people would stop working if most of their incremental income was going to taxes.  Great I say. 
Then there might be more work for other people to do.  Spread the work and the income around. 
Its also very true that the real wealth creators out there don’t really work for money.  They work for the joy that creating something new gives them. 
How many stories have you seen about the original founder of a new business being pushed aside, or leaving voluntarily when the business gets big and bureaucratic.  They often then go on to start another business, they work ridiculous hours and yes they make money, but they seem not to care about it.
The people that are focused in on the amount of money they have, and how much more they want,  are the source of all our economic and political problems.  We have to get them back under control or we are never going to get out from under.
After all, once you have a million dollars do you really need more?  For what?  More Ferrari’s? A bigger plasma TV?  Do things like this actually make you happy? 
If so then you are a victim of the disease I am ranting about. 
Is there a cure for it?  Probably not.  We need to palliate the symptoms so the rest of us don’t get infected, or suffer from the results of their sickness. 
Will this sort of program ever get enacted?  I am an eternal optimist, but not in the short term.  Because the rich are powerful will not sit idly by.  And because my view is clearly a minority one.  And if all the troubles that The Great Recession has caused did not stir a mass movement to rein the wealthy in, what will it take?  Something I do not want to live through I think. 
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Sunday, August 8, 2010

Economics 101

Before I start ranting about specific events I want to explain my philosophy if you will.  The sort of economic system that I would like to see come into existence.  I know that there are powerful vested interests that are not going to be in favor of this.  I also know that not everyone, and maybe nobody, will agree with the tenets of this system. 
But I think it is a better way of running things.  It’s a third way if you will between the Washington Consensus, or Rational Economic Man, or whatever you want to call the system we have had for a while, and the various forms of socialism, or planned economics. 
I call it Bounded Capitalism, or the Bounded Market System
It rejects the micromanaging and control of the market that the left tends to endorse, but puts limits on the excesses of the market.  Yes, I am talking about a role for government.  That may be heresy to some people, but I am also talking about letting the market decide almost all of the time. 
By the way, I am talking about a market as defined in most Eco 101 courses.  One with many buyers and sellers.  That’s a market we haven’t seen in a while.
Obviously there are a lot of details to this idea and it will take more than one post to explain it.  Hopefully there are those of you out there that will stick around and follow my argument as I develop it. 
But the general idea is to keep income within certain boundaries, by mechanisms that interfere with the market as little as possible.  Nobody is poor, nobody is Bill Gates. 
Could I mean a (gasp!) graduated income tax?
Possibly, it’s one possible feature of this system. 
Cover of "Small Is Beautiful: Economics a...Another key part is size.  We have all read the various articles and speeches about too big to fail in re the financial crisis.  Well, I think the too big to fail, or too big to exist phenomenon exists all through our economy and it is, to not coin a phrase “The Axis Of Evil”
If Small Is Beautiful then Big Is Ugly. 
Details to follow.
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