Originally posted by John Skelton
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Osborne discovers that the rich avoid paying tax
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Originally posted by John Skelton View PostYou mean in order to reverse the redistribution of income from poor to rich begun in the late 1970s it will be necessary to respond in kind - dispense with taxation - and go for appropriation? Fine by me .
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John Skelton
Originally posted by ahinton View PostThat ain't what I said and you know it! As I hope that I also indicated, if only by implication - nothing could be so simple in practice!
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odd thing this. The rich claimed that the 50% rate actually raised less tax than a lower rate would. They say a lower top rate will raise more tax, which will come from the better off since most people don't pay the top rate.
So the well off actually asked to pay more tax.
Funny, because they don't usually think that paying more tax is good.
Hmmmmmmmmmmm......I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
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Originally posted by teamsaint View Postodd thing this. The rich claimed that the 50% rate actually raised less tax than a lower rate would. They say a lower top rate will raise more tax, which will come from the better off since most people don't pay the top rate.
So the well off actually asked to pay more tax.
Funny, because they don't usually think that paying more tax is good.
Hmmmmmmmmmmm......
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Originally posted by John Skelton View PostYou don't think taxation is a good way of redistributing income, fine; maybe it isn't. Maybe, seen from a certain perspective, any redistribution of income from the present situation is undesirable. (If you're holding plenty of the stuff, for example). However. The last 30 years have seen a programmatic, with accompanying ideology backed up by force where necessary, redistribution of already unequally distributed wealth from poor to rich. The situation isn't different in 'developing economies', though the spread of new prosperity is wider (with the same vast grabs at share of capital by the rich). It might not be simple, but if the poor decide to take the matter into their own hands, through revolutionary organisation, on what grounds would you disapprove of that? That it's unfair to the rich?
The problem with "the poor" deciding to take "the matter" into their own hands is that not all of the poor share identical agendas and goals or identical views as to how such goals might be achieved. More importantly, however, I see redistribution of wealth as a micro-phenomenon, i.e. as something that occurs everytime there is a transaction, however large or small and, as such, it seems to me that there can be no reliable means - taxation régimes or otherwise - that can or will effectively exert control over such redistribution; every penny of profit represents a loss for someone else and every transaction has its beneficiary and its loser.
Furthermore, I think it important, especially when considering tax structures as a potential means of addressing "the problem of the rich", to define first how one should identify "the rich"; those on large incomes might well be seen as "income rich", but true financial wealth is surely more meaningfully measured in the ownership of valuable assets, be they land, buildings, businesses and business interests, financial instruments of one kind or another or readily realisable cash. There may well be people out there with vast portfolios of such things who may justly be described as "rich" but who have - and in some cases perceive the need to have - relatively modest incomes, but those low incomes do not make them any the less "rich". How can taxation address such a situation? Only by the imposition of wealth taxes which, for example, France and Spain have but UK does not. The problem with these is that some rich people who are liable to them but have insufficient cash resources to meet those liabilities have to sell assets in order to do so; this ultimately devalues assets to the point at which less wealth tax becomes levied on the rich. In other words, it has little or no beneficial effect for the rest of us.
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The problem with these is that some rich people who are liable to them but have insufficient cash resources to meet those liabilities have to sell assets in order to do so; this ultimately devalues assets to the point at which less wealth tax becomes levied on the rich. In other words, it has little or no beneficial effect for the rest of us.
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John Skelton
@ahinton #131
The last 30 or so years have seen a systematic redistribution of already highly unequal wealth from the poor to the rich (more than reversing the trend of post-1945 social and economic policy in the 'developed' world; hence redistribution is a perfectly good description of Reaganite / Thatcherite policy). One major factor in this redistribution has been the policy of wage restraint effected in part by breaking the Trade Unions and reducing their bargaining power (or refusing to recognise them altogether).
This has been accompanied by a tax policy which has reduced the amount of tax proportionate to wealth ... 1% (for the sake of keeping it simple for a conversation on an internet message board, something you have a temperamental aversion to I realise) pay. So that when figures get produced showing the % of total tax paid by the 1% (or whatever) to show how put upon that 1% is, what is neglected is the simple fact that if wealth was distributed more equally tax would be paid more equally. Producing the entirely unparadoxical effect that more people would pay more tax and be better off in the process, and that some people (1% etc.) would pay less tax and be worse off in the process.
You love presenting everything as some intractable dilemma, but the balance rich - the rest hasn't happened by accident or state of nature: it has happened because of political and economic policy, enforced by government and trans-governmental theory and action. It is, therefore, reasonable to suggest that with a bit of will and effort and enforcement (of the kind that has been applied to protect the poor to rich redistribution of three decades) the trend could be reversed. One way to do that would be super-taxing. Another would be appropriation and redistribution of assets. Something you would perhaps describe as "immoral".
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Originally posted by aeolium View PostI disagree. The devaluation of the ludicrously appreciated property values in some parts of the country, particularly London, is wholly to be desired and would benefit everyone apart from that small group of the wealthy and property speculators who contribute to making housing increasingly unaffordable for many people.
Originally posted by aeolium View PostAnd I see redistributive taxation not merely as an opportunity to increase the overall tax take so that public infrastructure as a whole is improved, but as a means to abolish that whole class of the superrich (at least from this country) and move towards a society of greater income equality. I just don't think huge salaries are ever justifiable in a country where 5 million households are in relative poverty.
Where I disagree with you is in the very notion of "redistributive taxation" as a realistic, meaningful and practically achievable possibility. Most of us are either (a) poor, (b) rather poor, (c) have just about enough of which to manage or (d) relatively comfortably off; only a very few are "rich". Charging, say, an income tax rate of 50% on the largest parts of the very few large taxable incomes of that tiny handful of people who would have the means to pay such tax from those incomes will make negligible redistributive difference to the rest of us, particularly in that those in categories (a) to (c) above will have little hope of rising into category (d) as a result of such measures as they might do if there could really be such a thing as redistributive taxation.
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Originally posted by John Skelton View Post@ahinton #131
The last 30 or so years have seen a systematic redistribution of already highly unequal wealth from the poor to the rich (more than reversing the trend of post-1945 social and economic policy in the 'developed' world; hence redistribution is a perfectly good description of Reaganite / Thatcherite policy). One major factor in this redistribution has been the policy of wage restraint effected in part by breaking the Trade Unions and reducing their bargaining power (or refusing to recognise them altogether).
Originally posted by John Skelton View PostThis has been accompanied by a tax policy which has reduced the amount of tax proportionate to wealth ... 1% (for the sake of keeping it simple for a conversation on an internet message board, something you have a temperamental aversion to I realise) pay. So that when figures get produced showing the % of total tax paid by the 1% (or whatever) to show how put upon that 1% is, what is neglected is the simple fact that if wealth was distributed more equally tax would be paid more equally. Producing the entirely unparadoxical effect that more people would pay more tax and be better off in the process, and that some people (1% etc.) would pay less tax and be worse off in the process.
You love presenting everything as some intractable dilemma, but the balance rich - the rest hasn't happened by accident or state of nature: it has happened because of political and economic policy, enforced by government and trans-governmental theory and action. It is, therefore, reasonable to suggest that with a bit of will and effort and enforcement (of the kind that has been applied to protect the poor to rich redistribution of three decades) the trend could be reversed. One way to do that would be super-taxing. Another would be appropriation and redistribution of assets. Something you would perhaps describe as "immoral".
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