Dixie - In Memoriam
New member
The article I posted is written by Walter M. Cadette, an economist (JP Morgan, retired) and formerly senior scholar at the Jerome Levy Economics Institute at Bard College. He is not some loony lefty but somebody who has worked on Wall Street.
I'm not impressed. As I said, you (and Cadette's) first flaw is the myth that we tax the wealthy. We simply don't. Now, everything else you have to say from that point, is developed and constructed on a false logic, the presumption that we do, in fact, tax wealth. We don't.
We tax income, and you presume that people who make a large amount of income are wealthy. The fact is, the overwhelming majority of high income tax earners are small business owners, not the uber-wealthy billionaires, as you imagine. They are people who are living fairly comfortably, because they have worked very hard to build a successful business, but they are not wealthy. The really wealthy people generally don't earn incomes anymore, they stopped when they became wealthy. Now they use their money to invest and allow financial institutes to use it for interest dividends, and they relax and enjoy life. You can't really tax these people and punish them, they don't earn anything. You can tax their dividend incomes, but they may move the money out of this country, where it's no use to an American banker and can't be loaned. Or they may not, if the amount is insignificant, but good luck trying to fund all we need to pay for with what you'll get. It amounts to little of nothing, as the main source of tax revenues are the people who are earning a paycheck each week, the middle class. It always has been, and always will be.
To gain increased tax revenues, the middle class tax rates will have to be raised. Or we could cut the top marginal rates, as that has also proven to increase revenues. Another option would be to levy some degree of taxation on the 48% of working Americans who pay no tax at all. The one thing you don't want to do is raise the taxes on the top income earners, because these are the people who provide 96% of the jobs. In the type of slow economy we have, their only alternative for paying a tax increase, will be to decrease labor costs by eliminating jobs. They can't raise prices anymore, with rising fuel costs and insurance, they've already adjusted this as much as they can, they can only start downsizing now. But I know that you and Cadette have it all figured out, how we can still do what you claim and it won't cost any jobs. The problem is, that is all based on a fallacy that we tax wealth, when we don't. So the scenario only exists between your ears.