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An attempt to justify taxation

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filc:

Might makes right?

I'm saying this has nothing to do with right and wrong.

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nirgrahamUK:

 evidence? argument?

I recently had a civil dispute with my mother over my trust fund whereby it was decided that I was being stolen from and as a consequence, my mother's power as trustee was taken away and now she can't steal from me anymore.  Couldn't have been done without the courts and by extension, the police.

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and what are you referring to when you say that /this/ has nothing to do with right and wrong?

is it that demonstrations of the ethical justification or lack thereof for the right to tax has nothing to do with right and wrong?

 

Where there is no property there is no justice; a proposition as certain as any demonstration in Euclid

Fools! not to see that what they madly desire would be a calamity to them as no hands but their own could bring

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nirgrahamUK:

you are trying to have it both ways. morals and ethics are 'irrelevant' and 'important to motivate people'. 

I suppose I need a better word than irrelevant.  But that seems to be the best word.  Ultimately, rhetoric matters but power matters more.  And rhetoric can bring power.  I suppose Obama is a great example of that.

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bloomj31:
Couldn't have been done without the courts and by extension, the police.
lack of imagination maybe? also maybe you are biased towards noting what you see as positives that police provide, whilst you are discounting how much they extort from you, and remain completely in denial of the benefits of a competitive solution to your security/justice issue.... 

Where there is no property there is no justice; a proposition as certain as any demonstration in Euclid

Fools! not to see that what they madly desire would be a calamity to them as no hands but their own could bring

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nirgrahamUK:

and what are you referring to when you say that /this/ has nothing to do with right and wrong?

is it that demonstrations of the ethical justification or lack thereof for the right to tax has nothing to do with right and wrong?

This thread.  He wants to justify taxation.  As if it had anything to do with right or wrong.  It's got everything to do with power.  They couldn't tax us if they didn't have the police and the military.  No one would pay.  At least I wouldn't.

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bloomj31:
Ok fine.  But doesn't that highlight how important enforcement is?
No.

 

bloomj31:
I mean basically...anyone can make a claim against anyone if they have the force to back it up.
No.

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nirgrahamUK:

bloomj31:
Couldn't have been done without the courts and by extension, the police.
lack of imagination maybe? also maybe you are biased towards noting what you see as positives that police provide, whilst you are discounting how much they extort from you, and remain completely in denial of the benefits of a competitive solution to your security/justice issue.... 

I don't know, maybe.  Or maybe you've had a very bad experience with the police or the courts and so your experiences influence your viewpoints differently.  I don't mind the government taking my money for defense.  You do.  They take yours too.  That's because they have the power to.  It's not right.  But it happens.

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bloomj31:
I suppose I need a better word than irrelevant.  But that seems to be the best word.  Ultimately, rhetoric matters but power matters more.  And rhetoric can bring power.  I suppose Obama is a great example of that.

people who believe in morality, actually believe in morality. its not 'empty' rhetoric to them.

Where there is no property there is no justice; a proposition as certain as any demonstration in Euclid

Fools! not to see that what they madly desire would be a calamity to them as no hands but their own could bring

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bloomj31:
It's not right.
 true. you finally 'get it' 
bloomj31:
 But it happens.
and you are teaching me something new....

if it didn't happen it would not be discussed by libertarians.

 

Where there is no property there is no justice; a proposition as certain as any demonstration in Euclid

Fools! not to see that what they madly desire would be a calamity to them as no hands but their own could bring

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filc replied on Fri, Jan 8 2010 6:45 PM

What exactly is an ethical matter by your terms Bloom? Or do you consider ethics and morals as being benign concepts having no real tangible meaning?

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nirgrahamUK:

people who believe in morality, actually believe in morality. its not 'empty' rhetoric to them.

That seems to me to be more of a statement of your personal position than anything.  Because morality matters to you.  Or you feel it's served you well.  That's fine.

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bloomj31:
This thread.  He wants to justify taxation.  As if it had anything to do with right or wrong.  It's got everything to do with power.  They couldn't tax us if they didn't have the police and the military.  No one would pay.  At least I wouldn't.

you are rejecting the question he posed rather than engaging with it. you answer him that his question is irrelevant...... to you... or to everyone?. can you prove that its irrelevant to him?. i suppose you have a pet theory why he thinks its relevant to him, but that he is wrong about it..... i'd like to hear that

Where there is no property there is no justice; a proposition as certain as any demonstration in Euclid

Fools! not to see that what they madly desire would be a calamity to them as no hands but their own could bring

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filc:

What exactly is an ethical matter by your terms Bloom? Or do you consider ethics and morals as being benign concepts having no real tangible meaning?

I don't know, I don't think about ethics or morals.  I'm not a religious person.

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nirgrahamUK:

you are rejecting the question he posed rather than engaging with it. you answer him that his question is irrelevant...... to you... or to everyone?. can you prove that its irrelevant to him?. i suppose you have a pet theory why he thinks its relevant to him, but that he is wrong about it..... i'd like to hear that

You're right, it's irrelevant to me.  I suppose I'm proselytizing though I don't mean to be.  I don't know why he wants to justify taxation.  Maybe so he'll feel better about himself when he takes other people's stuff?  Who knows.

 

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bloomj31:
That seems to me to be more of a statement of your personal position than anything.  Because morality matters to you.  Or you feel it's served you well.  That's fine.

if you believe that moral talk is rhetorical for everyone. and is 'empty'. how does it work in the motivational way which you acknowledge; is it magic? the people that hear the words do not hear anything that they care about or believe in or are interested in... they are just compelled by magic.......

Where there is no property there is no justice; a proposition as certain as any demonstration in Euclid

Fools! not to see that what they madly desire would be a calamity to them as no hands but their own could bring

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nirgrahamUK:

if you believe that moral talk is rhetorical for everyone. and is 'empty'. how does it work in the motivational way which you acknowledge; is it magic? the people that hear the words do not hear anything that they care about or believe in or are interested in... they are just compelled by magic.......

I honestly don't know, I haven't been motivated by morality in a long time.

I mean I know people care about morality, I just don't know why.  I don't believe in God.  If I believed in God, morals would matter to me.

I know that if I do things that other people think are immoral and they have a way to punish me, that I'm much less inclined to do immoral things.  That's why the law exists.  It doesn't say what you should or shouldn't do.  Just what you're allowed to do and not allowed to do.  But ultimately, the law draws its power from an enforcer.  God, the enforcer of morality, doesn't seem very involved in this world.  But that's just my personal feeling.  I don't know that God doesn't exist.

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filc replied on Fri, Jan 8 2010 6:57 PM

bloomj31:
I don't know, I don't think about ethics or morals.  I'm not a religious person.

Yea I'm not entirely sure what religion has to do with this either. 

bloomj31:
I honestly don't know, I haven't been motivated by morality in a long time.

But you are.  Might makes right is a standard of justified morals. 

I'll take your concession that you subscribe to the might makes right class of ethics. In other words your morals are justified by the superior ability of force. You say it much more eloquently then I.

bloomj31:
  The power of the army is the power to tax.  He who owns/controls the army has the power to tax.  It's not about justice or injustice though.
All this nonsense about social justice and the necessity of redistribution are clever cover-ups and rationalizations for the obvious truth that if you've got the power of the military, both foreign and domestic, you can do pretty much whatever you want.

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bloomj31:

If I can't protect my stuff, it's not going to be mine for long.  That's why I have the police.  They help protect me.

bloomj31:

I don't know, I don't think about ethics or morals.  I'm not a religious person.

 

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What's interesting is that you agree that there is no ethical or moral justification for taxation but that that's actually because taxation is ethically and morally wrong.  But... if there's no God.  Where do you get the authority to tell something like the government that it's morally wrong?  Who gives you that power?

By the way, Fil, I'm saying that you don't have to be right to do something.  That's why taxation, to me, is a consequence of power, not some moral right the government claims to have.  They use their moral claim to get people to play along.  Which is fine.  I just know they've got the power, and so I obey.  That, to me, is why taxation is about power.

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filc replied on Fri, Jan 8 2010 7:01 PM

Hehe. Is there a quadruple face palm? 

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you seem to be confused about the difference between both force and reason. as well as power and liberty. i don't think i can be patient enough to help you in this regard. peace out.

Where there is no property there is no justice; a proposition as certain as any demonstration in Euclid

Fools! not to see that what they madly desire would be a calamity to them as no hands but their own could bring

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nirgrahamUK:

you seem to be confused

On contrary. Bloom been here long enough to know better. He's repeating the same questions that have been answered [thoroughly] already. Those blatant contradictions also help give him away.

The game is simple, and one that is a favourite of young children and trolls alike.

Step 1: Act inquisitively toward another person's vocation (ask him/her questions).

Step 2: Persuade said mentor to hold your hold through the journey.

Step 3: Watch a month of Sean Hannity, and then stick an icepick in your temporal lobe.

Step 4: Repeat steps one and two.

Step 5: ???

Step 6: PROFIT!!!

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Why is it that when someone disagrees with someone, the first thing they attack is their sincerity?

I'm not saying this to make you guys mad.  I'm saying what I'm saying because as I see it, there's no way to find an ethical or moral justification for taxation, that instead the only explanation for the power to tax is the power of the army and the police. 

I also don't feel like I've asked for a mentor or whatever.  Not that I don't appreciate the effort but you don't really think you're going to change my mind do you?  Everything that I say vibes with my life experience, you think you're going to invalidate my life experience on the internet?  Come on.  I don't imagine you come on the internet to have your mind changed either. Your life experience has led you guys to become anarchists.  This makes sense, but your life experiences aren't universal so to assume that because someone disagrees with you that they must be confused or a troll is a little...silly to me.

I know some of you might think you've got the answers to everything.  Fine.  But you can't possibly expect me to buy that can you?

I don't like that my sincerity always gets challenged, as if I'm just saying what I'm saying to make people angry.  But then again, I can't really do anything about it either.  So it goes.

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filc:

Hehe. Is there a quadruple face palm? 

Oddly no.

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filc replied on Fri, Jan 8 2010 7:52 PM

[EDIT]

I had to catch myself. While I don't think I had anything destructive to offer I don't see a point to continuing. 

No one here doubts your sincerity Bloom, I hope you realize that. <3

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bloomj31:
I don't know, I don't think about ethics or morals.  I'm not a religious person.
Neither ethics nor morals have thing-one to do with religion.

 

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Knight_of_BAAWA:
Neither ethics nor morals have thing-one to do with religion.

Well ethics concerns the discourse on what is the 'good', I'm trying to think of whether that connects into religion. I mean in a sense religion is interested in the 'good.' What do you think BAAWA? I believe you are an atheist (?)

'Men do not change, they unmask themselves' - Germaine de Stael

 

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I see nothing about religion which tries to connect to the "good" other than in a self-serving manner, i.e. to perpetuate the meme (usually by proclaiming anything against the religion is bad). Ethics and morality are disconnected from religion in a logical sense, i.e. that we can discuss them without ever referencing religion.

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There is no justification for putting a gun to my head and forcing me to pay for something I do not want.

You observe, but you do not see.

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Justin Laws:

There is no justification for putting a gun to my head and forcing me to pay for something I do not want.

Like a debt?

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he did want the debt otherwise he wouldnt have taken it on and become someone who owes a debt. you seem to have a penchant for asking questions of a certain type.....

Where there is no property there is no justice; a proposition as certain as any demonstration in Euclid

Fools! not to see that what they madly desire would be a calamity to them as no hands but their own could bring

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Neither has the state ever agreed not collect the tax, so?

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nirgrahamUK:

he did want the debt otherwise he wouldnt have taken it on and become someone who owes a debt. you seem to have a penchant for asking questions of a certain type.....

I would never pay any of my debts if I weren't going to be forced to.  I'd have no reason to.  Why pay for anything if you don't have to?

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scineram:
Neither has the state ever agreed not collect the tax, so?
when did i take on the obligation to pay tax?

Where there is no property there is no justice; a proposition as certain as any demonstration in Euclid

Fools! not to see that what they madly desire would be a calamity to them as no hands but their own could bring

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bloomj31:
nirgrahamUK:
he did want the debt otherwise he wouldnt have taken it on and become someone who owes a debt. you seem to have a penchant for asking questions of a certain type.....
I would never pay any of my debts if I weren't going to be forced to.  I'd have no reason to.  Why pay for anything if you don't have to?

it doesnt seem you understood my explanation.

Where there is no property there is no justice; a proposition as certain as any demonstration in Euclid

Fools! not to see that what they madly desire would be a calamity to them as no hands but their own could bring

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William replied on Sat, Jan 9 2010 1:59 PM

bloomj31:

nirgrahamUK:

he did want the debt otherwise he wouldnt have taken it on and become someone who owes a debt. you seem to have a penchant for asking questions of a certain type.....

I would never pay any of my debts if I weren't going to be forced to.  I'd have no reason to.  Why pay for anything if you don't have to?

 

That's fine, but in a more market oriented economy, if it were a sufficient enough of a trend to screw the creditors/ owners/ lenders the system in which the creditors getting screwed wouldn't exist on any noteworthy level, or even if they did the failed credit/ rent/ loan system would be replaced by a more workable system.

"I am not an ego along with other egos, but the sole ego: I am unique. Hence my wants too are unique, and my deeds; in short, everything about me is unique" Max Stirner
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Justin Laws:
There is no justification for putting a gun to my head and forcing me to pay for something I do not want.
scineram:
Like a debt?
You forgot "that you did not incur either willingly or via some action to violate the rights of another". You really should work on completing your thoughts better.

 

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banned replied on Sat, Jan 9 2010 5:41 PM

Eric:
I should start off by saying that this assumes [...] that objective ethics do not exist.

Really, what's the purpose of attempting to justify some action when you begin by assuming that there exists no objectively unjustifiable action?

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loftin replied on Thu, Jan 14 2010 5:46 PM

Hi. I've been pursuing this idea for years now - am convinced that it is the right way to view taxation. Taxation should be attached to benefit derived, and the primary economic benefit we derive from a system such as our is property rights.  Below are a some thoughts I've been pursuing along these lines (started as a PhD student at Wharton). Some of you may find it interesting...

LG

-------------------------------------

Content-Transfer-Encoding: base64

Reply-To: [email protected]

X-Priority: Normal

Sensitivity: Normal

Importance: Normal

To: Justin Wolfers <[email protected]>

Subject: Wealth tax

From: Loftin Graham <[email protected]>

Date: Thu, 4 Dec 2008 14:55:10 +0000

Content-Type: text/plain

MIME-Version: 1.0

On a more economic note, I am interested in the idea of replacing the annual income tax with a net wealth tax. I believe that a net wealth tax would more nearly approximate the legitimate economic claim that good government should have on its citizens than the current policy of taxing income does. Taxing net wealth (e.g. a fixed or perhaps even slightly decreasing pct to reflect decreasing marginal costs of production on the part of the government) reflects the principal economic benefit we derive from our form of government (individual property-rights) and allocates tax burdens across the population in a way that, unlike policies that tax income, more organcally reflect benefit derived. As a consequence, net wealth tax policies are more likely to respect individual property rights because the individual tax obligation is proportional to benefit derived rather than being the (potentially capricious) outcome of a democratic political process. Given the constraint of near-monopolistic power that governments presently tend to exert in tax matters, having a policy that reflects benefits derived is about as close as we can come to a competitive-pricing-type framework (one in which effective property rights are more balanced than under more monopolistic conditions).

 

Much if not most of what the government does through the establishment of institutions and the implementation of policies has an impact on our property rights. In the very first place, the fact that we can own and gainfully use property is of great economic value. In addition, the value of our human capital is affected by policies related to the labor markets; and our abilities to gain and then use whatever skills, knowlege, etc. we can is in many ways influenced by government. Again, it seems rather clear that the primary economic product of government relates to property rights. Another way of saying this is that what we stand to lose (the net amount at risk, to use an insurance term) in the absence of our form of government is the loss of our property rights - our net wealth, broadly defined (e.g. to include physical capital, human capital, financial capital, etc.). At any given instant, like owning an insurance policy, we benefit in a degree proportional to this net amount at risk; and the price that we are required to pay for that benefit (our tax obligations) should reflect this fact. I should note here that I am talking about financing the general operations of government through a net wealth tax. Other programs might be financed differently where appropriate, and non-economic benefits, such as the portion of "protection of life, liberty" that is essentially non-economic in nature, should be paid for in kind - e.g. by required military service or the draft in times of war or jury duty, etc..

 

One of the criticisms of taxing wealth is that it would represent a serious disincentive to save. There is of course some reason for concern on this point, but our concerns should be mitigated if not entirely eliminated by considering the fact that the current system, by providing disincentives for work (that's what an income tax does) implicitly reduces savings already since savings are generated by unconsumed income. By removing the income tax, the theory predicts an increase in income, which translates (again in micro-theory) to increased savings. So, whereas some decrease in savings might be expected, it is far from clear to me without doing some simulation studies or other form of analysis that the decrease would be anytyging to worry about; and it's even possible that the increase in income would more than compensate for the disincentive for saving. Perhaps of greater interest, however, is the fact that lower income individuals would likely be the ones that would (proportionally speaking) experience the greatest increase in savings, since they currently have a lower proportion of income that is disposable (hence susceptible to being saved/invested). From the perspective of this preliminary (and cursory) analysis we are justified in wondering whether income taxation effectively shifts the incentives and capacity for saving from the poor to the already wealthy relative to net wealth taxation; and if so, is it something that we're comfortable with?

 

If that were the only implication for the income versus net wealth tax policy comparison, it would be interesting enough I think; but it's not. It turns out that income taxation by its very nature inherently represents a form of wealth transfer from wealthier individuals to poorer individuals within the same income class. It is a wealth transfer because one subclass is effectively subsidizing the other: two individuals with the exact same net income pay equal income taxes while the one with greater net wealth implicitly (and by no choice of his own) derives a greater benefit: the guarantee of a greater absolute dollar amount via government provision of individual property rights. This will have the effect of increasing the wealth of the already wealthy relative to their less wealthy counterparts and represents, among other things, a form of discrimination against those with risky income streams relative to those with less risky income streams. This is because, in theory at least, two individuals with equal incomes can only have different net wealths if the assets backing their income (comprising their net wealths) are of different risk levels. So, the wall street banker with little initial accumulated (physical, financial capital) wealth and risky human capital wealth is subsidizing the Heinz family children who inherited a relatively well-diversified fraction of an estate. Switching from an income tax to a net wealth tax would arguably result in increased incentives for investment in risky assets, potentially offsetting any expected reductions in entrepreneurial incentives associated with having to pay taxes even when net income is not positive (something that would likely be incorporated into capital budgeting without much fanfare).

 

The above considerations are important because, again, not only do they highlight the injustice of the current income-tax policy (people are paying for services in a manner that is not proportional to the absolute dollar size of the benefit they receive), but it suggests the possibility that the injustice is opposite what most liberal-thinking people (i'm not necessarily one of these) think it should be. Interesting, no?

 

Sent via BlackBerry from T-Mobile

 

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

 

 

Subject: Re: On the Wealth Tax as Really an Income Tax

From: "Loftin Graham" <[email protected]>

Date: Wed, 23 Jul 2008 18:38:59 +0000

To: [email protected]

CC: "Norman Kurland" <[email protected]>

 

Mr. Greaney:

 

I've pasted your responses and am including my comments below each. Unfortunately that's about the best I can do on my pda. (my comments start with an *).

 

Sincerely,

Loftin Graham

 

Mr. Kurland: I'm still working my way through some of the other references you provided. I'm a slow reader and some of the writers use rather complicated language (e.g. sentence patterns). I don't see much in the way of math models for the binary concept - are there sources that provide that kind of characterization too?

 

 

---------------------------

 

[We are not paying for the rights to life and liberty, but for

protection of our rights to life and liberty. Government has to pay

people to perform its proper functions (to say nothing of all the

improper functions it has taken on), so the people make a grant of money

to the State so that the State, a necessary mechanism supporting our

social nature, can fulfill its role. If a good is non-economic,

obviously you can't put a price on it, and a price should not be

charged, i.e., a tax levied to support something for which the State

doesn't pay.]

 

* yes, where the gorebment's guarantee or protection of property rights are concerned, it's like insurance only to the extent that you are protecting or guaranteeing a net amount that would otherwise be at risk (i.e. in the absence of government). The mechanics of determining the price for such coverage is similar to that of determining the premium that would be associated with insurance on an object worth a certain amount in the sense that you just apply the per-guaranteed-unit cost to the amount at risk of potential loss. But yes, the comparison with insurance is limited (as most comparisons are at some level). So, the important thing from my perspective (and what matters in making a fair allocation of the aggregate tax obligation among all particiants) is to recognize that the benefit each person derives from a system that guarantees/protects property rights is proportional to the absolute economic value of those rights, which is best approximated, it seems to me, by total net wealth = total value of labor assets + total value of capital assets less the economic value of all outstanding obligations. Fixing the tax obligation as a percent of income (rather than denominating obligations in terms of wealth) unavoidably results in a situation in which the less wealthy at any given income level subsidize the cost of the property-rights guarantee provided to their more wealthy counterparts. That moves the situation in a direction opposite the stated desire of reducing the wealth gap.

 

[Obviously I did not express myself clearly, because I agree with you,

and thought that's what I said. By saying that protection of a poor

man's store of wealth (assuming he has any) is worth as much to the

small man, as protection of a rich man's store of wealth is worth to the

rich man, I was pointing out that, in moral philosophy - which should

underpin economics and tax policy, whatever anyone might have told you,

justice is the basis of civil life, and justice is the highest temporal

virtue, according to dead white European males like Aristotle, Aquinas,

Maimonides, and Ibm Khaldûn - a difference in degree does not make for a

difference in kind. I realize a lot of people have trouble with that

concept, and assert that because, e.g., a rich man is a hundred times

richer than a poor man, he should pay 100% tax, while the poor man,

because he is poor, should receive a redistribution of that tax - less a

rake-off for State bureaucrats, of course.

 

*OK. It sounds like I misunderstood what you meant.

 

[A difference in degree does not make for a difference in kind. Nothing

can both "be" and "not be" at the same time, e.g., I do not suddenly

lose my right to life, liberty, or property the moment I turn 30 or have

$1 million in the bank, that is, the moment extraneous circumstances are

taken into consideration. Circumstances may justify some things as an

expedient, e.g., the progressive income tax in time of national

emergency to provide a means of keeping people alive, but the moment the

emergency is past, unequal taxation of that sort becomes unjust and

unjustifiable. The "catch" in moral philosophy is that since taxation

is not objectively unjust, you can justify an unjust tax - a tax that is

not levied justly, that is - on the grounds that the anticipated good to

be derived from an injustice that is not objectively evil outweighs the

unintended evil that results, in this case, the rich paying more

proportionately than the non-rich above an adequate subsistence level.

This is called "the principle of double effect," and is valid only so

long as the emergency exists. Unfortunately, many people today assume

that because the social order is effectively in a state of chaos, such

expedients must be implemented as permanent solutions, and they are

somehow released from their personal obligation to organize with others

to restructure the social order to "fix" things so that just once again

can function.

 

* I'm not quite sure what you meant by "taxation is not objectively unjust". Any time that prices are forcibly charged which don't correspond to costs/market value, the tax would seem to me to be objectively unjust. Maybe there are extreme situations, but I guess I'm pretty uncomfortable suspending the principle of property rights. It seems that even in those times of chaos, the same principle is at work (no need for govt to suspend in whole or in part any individual's property rights). The cost (hence price) for the protection/guarantee (per dollar of wealth covered/protected) may go up as a result of the crisis, the distribution of wealth may change as a result of the crisis (more people with negative net wealth values, or below some exempted threshold), but the principle remains: the expenses incurred in providing the protection or guarantee should generally speaking be divided according to the distribution of wealth because it is wealth (broadly defined to include all rights, privileges, etc. attaching to property ownership - whether of the labor or the capital type) that is ultimately being guaranteed.

 

[Morally and legally, then, a poor man owns what he owns as fully as a

rich man owns what he owns. Neither the poor man nor the rich man own

what they own in a different way, or to a different degree than the

other. That being the case, the demands of justice are met if the State

protects the $100 of the poor man and the $1 billion of the rich man in

the same way. Obviously, however, it is much less expensive to protect

the poor man's $100 than it is to protect the rich man's $1 billion, if

only because thieves are going to target the rich man far more often

than they go after the poor man. When someone asked Clyde Barrow why he

robbed banks, he responded, logically enough, by saying, "That's where

the money is."

 

*Part of my point was that it could actually be the case that the price per dollar of net wealth covered/protected for poor individuals would be significantly less than for wealthy ones due to barriers to the free use of that wealth (whether of the labor or capital form) that exist in the marketplace. If the tax rules could reflect the true value of the coverage provided, it seems that this would provide natural incentives to all involved to encourage the government to make the modifications to the institutions and regulatory policies that would promote equal levels of protection or coverage for all citizens. I don't know if that's making anything more clear or not.

 

[Thus, a rich man should pay more in taxes than a poor man because the

benefits he receives cost more. However, because it would be unjust for

the rich man to pay more for a lesser degree of protection, or pay less

for a greater degree of protection, than the poor man, the tax rate

should be the same for both.

 

* I guess another way to think about this (the flip side to costs) is in terms of the value that the protection or guarantee has for the beneficiaries. Ultimately both are important to consider I guess.

 

[The only exception to this is, as noted above, in times of emergency

when the State takes more away proportionately from the rich man as an expedient. The caveat in moral philosophy, however, is rarely if ever

taken into account: when someone has his wealth confiscated in this

manner, the one who takes it (in this case, the State) owes not only the

duty of gratitude, but a reimbursement at some future date.]

 

* see earlier comment about suspending property rights. If it is compensated later that would make it less problematic, but it's more difficult to actually carry out too probably.

 

[If I understand this comment, you are seeking to gain the same end as

we are. We would do this by eliminating the complicated system of

deductions and credits that burden the tax code, raising the standard

exemption to a realistic level, and imposing a single rate above that

amount. Again, if I understand your comment, you appear to be trying to

correct the current system, when it would be better, in our view, to

restructure the whole thing and orient it along more just lines.]

 

* It's true that I sympathize with the goal of increasing access to capital markets, etc.; but actually, here I was trying to express why using the framework of fair pricing allows us to speak about objective fairness in the context of taxes. Once the economic relationship of government to its citizent is seen in its true light the idea of taxation is just a particular (albeit with some distinct characteristics) example of the pricing of a benefit conferred or of a service provided (in this case a guarantee of property rights). This means that there is a somewhat objective measure of fairness and that measure involves the "distance" between the actual tax obligation and the fair price for the benefit received.

 

[If I understand your comment, you are saying that the function of

government is to guarantee our lives, liberties, and property. If so, I

do not agree. The role of government is to provide a level playing

field by guaranteeing not our lives, liberties, and property, but access

to the means of enjoying our lives, liberties, and property. This may

sound as if there is no difference, but it is the difference between

equality of opportunity, and equality of results. The former is the

proper role of the State, the latter is socialism. Taxes are not,

therefore, some kind of insurance premium, but a fee for a service.

 

* I think I must not have expressed myself clearly. I agree that it's generally equality of opportunity that we're after. It's the rights associated with our wealth (labor and capital), for example, that are guaranteed, not some specific outcome of wealth attainment. My point was just that there is a sense in which the institutions constituting our government provide a guarantee of something that is kind of intangible (rights) and that the size of the benefit received is like the net amount at risk in the insurance context. Providing a guarantee is providing a type of service.

 

[For example, if we buy fire insurance for our homes, we do not consider

ourselves cheated if our house doesn't burn down, but if we pay taxes,

we are definitely being cheated if the State does not maintain a fire

department. Insurance involves a spreading of risk and minimizing the

cost per capita for a population, very loosely a form of gambling,

whereas taxation involves people paying for actual benefits received.

If the event against which are insured doesn't happen, most people would

consider themselves fortunate. If the government does not provide the

service for which taxes are collected, most people would consider

themselves oppressed.]

 

*That's right there's not really any risk pooling going on here, except in the case of social insurance programs like Social Security and Medicare. The thing that is like insurance is the pricing mechanism - that the net amount at risk in this case is the net wealth.

 

[Non-income generating assets are purchased out of consumption income

that has already been subject to taxation; they are "after tax" items,

and taxing them would, essentially, involve double taxation, which is

unjust, as even the IRS admits, unless they equivocate as they do with

corporations. The case is similar with income-generating assets -

wealth. They are purchased with after-tax income (unless the State is

trying to use the tax code to encourage industry or other desirable

behavior - which it shouldn't in any discriminatory fashion). By taxing

the income generated by wealth rather than the wealth itself, however,

you are taxing something new, once, rather than something that already

exists two or more times.]

 

* This comment calls into question whether my main point is being understood at all. Guaranteeing our right to life, liberty, etc. is a service that our government is supposed to provide. We where on that point, I believe. That service has a cost/price that is proportional to the benefit we receive. At any given point in time, an individual's benefit is proportional to the net amount that (s)he has at stake were that protection or guarantee to disappear. This is where the mechanics of insurance pricing comes in. What this seems to me to suggest is that for any given period of time, the price we should pay (the tax obligation that would correspond to each of us individually) is going to be proportional to some measure (e.g. the average) of the net amount at risk during that period.

This is not really that complicated it seems. We each benefit every day, week, month, year from a service that the government provides in the form of protection of our rights to whatever property we have at our disposal. In absolute dollar terms, we benefit at different levels (alternatively, you can say that we incur different levels of costs from the benefits we each enjoy in the government's provision of those rights). I say that in each period (whether you want to measure it on a daily, weekly, monthly, or annual basis is largely immaterial) we each receive a benefit that is proportional to the amount we have at stake with the loss of those rights provided by the government (namely property rights). This means that the tax obligation an individual has for each period is unavoidably related to his/her net wealth during that period, and the fact that you included an asset in net wealth in one year in no way suggests that you should exclude it the next years, because your right to it was "protected" in each year. Whether the asset was income-producing or not is immaterial to the fact that you received a benefit (the government incurred a cost) in having your right to own it/use it protected or guaranteed. I don't know how to make it more clear than that. If I have someone clean my house monthly, should I expect to only pay them for the new items that they clean each time, or the entire house? It makes no sense to speak about new and old in this context just as is doesn't in the context of taxes from my perspective. So, theoretically the tax calculation for individual (j) would look something like this:

 

O(j) = Integral(t=a, t=b) Wj(t)*r dt,

 

Where a is the beginning of the period of interest and b is the end, Wj(t) is the net wealth for individual j at time t, and r is the net wealth tax rate. The value of r would be set so that

 

General govt expenditures during the period (a,b) = Sum(j=1 to N) O(j).

 

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