Income Inequality: Non-Solutions to a Non-Problem

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Ep. 298 Income Inequality: Non-Solutions to a Non-Problem
http://tomwoods.com/podcast/ep-298-income-inequality-non-solutions-to-a-non-problem/
Tom Woods (04 December 2014)

Everyone’s talking about income inequality, and I thought this article by Robert Higgs — “Nineteen Neglected Consequences of Income Redistribution” — was worth an episode’s worth of commentary.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kloxU54kums



Here are the resources for today’s episode:

Books Mentioned

Frederick Bastiat, The Law. At this link you can get a free e-book edition or buy the print version.

David Beito, From Mutual Aid to the Welfare State.

Connor Boyack, The Tuttle Twins Learn About The Law. This is a children’s book that conveys the ideas of Bastiat’s classic work.

Charles Murray, In Pursuit: Of Happiness and Good Government.

Thomas Woods, Rollback.

Previous Episodes Mentioned

Ep. 286: Who Creates Jobs? (George Reisman)
Ep. 256: The Truth About the Fast-Food Protests (Diana Furchtgott-Roth)
Ep. 237: Why Are We So Rich? (Deirdre McCloskey)
Ep. 150: Teaching Liberty to Kids (Connor Boyack)
Ep. 53: Before the Welfare State? (David Beito)

Episodes on Health Care

Ep. 254: What’s Wrong with Health Care (Colin Gunn)
Ep. 193: Affordable Health Care in the Age of Obamacare (Sean Parnell)
Ep. 191: Market Medicine (Charles Sauer)
Ep. 147: Obamacare and Medicare: A Physician’s View (Jane Orient)

Special Offers

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Kind of irrelevant/straw-man really - Woods is avoiding the problem of inequality by focussing on income. Inequality today derives from capital gains - specifically, the unearned increment (aka ripping off the productive members of the economy) - not income.
At the moment the Mises Inst is trying to pretend that the 1%-99% meme is false. I can't think of a better way to invite ridicule.
 
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Kind of irrelevant/straw-man really - Woods is avoiding the problem of inequality by focussing on income. Inequality today derives from capital gains - specifically, the unearned increment (aka ripping off the productive members of the economy) - not income.
At the moment the Mises Inst is trying to pretend that the 1%-99% meme is false. I can't think of a better way to invite ridicule.
In a system of perpetual inflation (The Federal Reserve System) capital gains is the only way to protect the fruits of ones labor. Get on board with ending the Fed, then we'll talk LVT.
 
then we'll talk LVT.

Apparently he wants not only a Land Value Tax, but also a Capital Value Tax. You have capital? You're ripping febo off! Built a factory? You didn't build that. Have some machinery in your garage? You stole it from your neighbors. Saved up $100,000 in a retirement account by hard work and careful budgeting for decades? You parasite!

All those dirty people with capital. Wrecking society. If only we could get rid of them and their capital. Then we could.....

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dig in the mud with sticks.

And wouldn't that be fun?!
 
All those dirty people with capital. Wrecking society. If only we could get rid of them and their capital. Then we could.....

dig in the mud with sticks.

And wouldn't that be fun?!

But don't you see? Once we finally got to that point, we would repeal all the other taxes and just get by with a Mud Tax and a Stick Tax ... (which, of course, would be paid with mud and sticks ...)

Simple. Elegant. Brilliant!
 
Apparently he wants not only a Land Value Tax, but also a Capital Value Tax. You have capital? You're ripping febo off! Built a factory? You didn't build that. Have some machinery in your garage? You stole it from your neighbors. Saved up $100,000 in a retirement account by hard work and careful budgeting for decades? You parasite!

All those dirty people with capital. Wrecking society. If only we could get rid of them and their capital. Then we could.....
dig in the mud with sticks.

And wouldn't that be fun?!

I like the single tax - no taxes on labour or capital, all tax on the unearned increment of land, the commons. That shrinks the state, kills off the rentier sector and liberates workers and entrepeneurs, makes capital and workers the allies they really are.
Don't you be confusing the capitalist and the rentier, supported by his co-rentier and protector the state, they are completely different.
 
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In a system of perpetual inflation (The Federal Reserve System) capital gains is the only way to protect the fruits of ones labor. Get on board with ending the Fed, then we'll talk LVT.

LVT/the single tax comes first. The single tax is about the real economy, real work and innovation. The FED is part of the virtual world of credit and is therefore secondary (credit depends on work, work does not depend on credit). The FED's role, as part of the rentier-state is to protect the rentier sector (aka FIRE - finance.insurance.real-estate - sector). If we brought in the single tax it would kill off the rentier sector, so the FED would be effectively abolished.
 
Don't you be confusing the capitalist and the rentier, supported by his co-rentier and protector the state, they are completely different.

Are they really so different? I don't think so. If you want an LVT, why not have a CVT?

Objection #1: The land is already there, while the factory, allegedly, isn't.

But it is. It's already there. It's already been built. The factory's existence is a fact of life. It's a done deal. The same efficiency argument applies to it as to the land: it's there anyway, so let's tax whoever owns it to force them into increased efficiency. Taxing the factory doesn't make the factory disappear, any more than taxing land makes it disappear. It just gets run more efficiently. In fact, remember, if the factory were to be abandoned, it eventually would become philosophically land. In Will Smith's "I Am Legend" New York, (leaving aside the property rights of the zombies) all the skyscrapers, the cars, the gasoline, the canned food... these are all "land" for him. They are all just provided to him by nature as far as from an ethical or economic point of view. So why wait for it to be abandoned? Tax it now!

Now taxing factory owners does provide a disincentive going forward to build *more* factories, but so does taxing the Universe provide a disincentive going forward to open up more parts and resources of the Universe to productive use. And while land and factories may be metaphysically unable to disappear, yet you tax them too much and even the existing land and factories will be abandoned, and crumble or go fallow. They will cease to exist in the economy. This goes back to what I keep saying: the amount of land in the economy can increase or decrease, and does all the time. It's not fixed at all!

Feel free to add more objections for me to knock into oblivion!

Objection#2: .......
 
One taxes land so one does not have to tax capital and labour. A side effect of taxing land may be that it gets used more efficiently, but that's not the reason for taxing it.

One taxes land to reduce the state - the rentier state came into existence to tax labour and capital and to give the rentier and other cronies a free ride. No more free riders but no penalties for working and creating.

The rentier as rentier is non-productive. The rentier as rentier builds nothing, merely extracts wealth. All wealth is created through labour aided by capital. Thus, taxes should be removed from labour and capital.
 
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One taxes land so one does not have to tax capital and labour.
One taxes gas so one doesn't have to tax carbon and vehicle sales. One taxes salt so one doesn't have to have a poll tax and an import tax.

Wait a second.....

None of these things are related to each other at all! There's no logical connection. The only connection? They are all different, interesting methods of stealing. We don't need to steal at all! We don't need to tax at all!

Let's graduate from kindergarten as a species. We don't need to steal. There are big-boy ways to accomplish goals and solve problems that don't involve stealing.

Let's be big boys.

Next!
 
All tax is theft - stop hiding behind a meaningless catchphrase. If you want to get to a society where there is no tax you have to be asking - how do we get there? Or does asking that question take you out of your comfort zone?
 
All tax is theft
Bingo! You got it! You agree, then?

- stop hiding behind a meaningless catchphrase.
Oh, I would never do that. Please discuss whatever you want regarding this issue, and I will fearlessly discuss it back. Since I have no idea in what sense you think I am "hiding," and since I certainly don't feel like I'm hiding, I will just ignore your suggestion as it is based upon inaccurate info. :)

If you want to get to a society where there is no tax you have to be asking - how do we Or does asking that question take you out of your comfort zone?
Yes, I do want to get to such a society. Yes, I have and do spend significant amounts of time thinking about just that -- how to get there. I do not know what you mean by comfort zone, but presumably it is meant to be insulting somehow, so I'll just ignore that comment as useless.

I have one highly relevant question for you:

Do you? Do you want to get to a society where there is no tax?
 
Tax can be voluntary. All tax is theft implies that tax can never be anything other than theft, which is nonsense and stops libertarians from thinking about tax completely (funny how no one who believes that tax is theft protests by stopping payment...). This denies the history of libertarianism, which is steeped in the notion of using tax reform to curtail the state, free the market and end the domination of the rentier.
On top of that, there's the trifling matter that you cannot be a libertarian if you are not also a single taxer of some kind. Self ownership and non aggression are impossible without land reform.

But there I've done it again - I've alienated when I want to persaude.... maybe i'm just a hypocrit troll who stumbled on Henry George and is using him to make myself look clever.
 
Tax can be voluntary.

If it is voluntary, it is not a tax - it is a price.

All tax is theft implies that tax can never be anything other than theft, which is nonsense and stops libertarians from thinking about tax completely (funny how no one who believes that tax is theft protests by stopping payment...).

Bullshit. Go tell it to Irwin Schiff, Edward and Elaine Brown, etc., etc. etc. - including RPF's very own phill4paul.

So I guess anyone who lets an armed robber take his wallet must therefore think that armed robbery is okay ... :rolleyes::rolleyes::rolleyes:

On top of that, there's the trifling matter that you cannot be a libertarian if you are not also a single taxer of some kind.

What are you smoking and where can I get some?

But there I've done it again - I've alienated when I want to persaude.... maybe i'm just a hypocrit troll who stumbled on Henry George and is using him to make myself look clever.

Yeah, that's pretty much the conclusion I've arrived at, too ...
 
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Tax can be voluntary.

Here is the definition of theft, as I see it:

Theft: taking the property of other people without their permission.

I ask myself, when someone engages in taxation, do they take the property of other people without their permission? Yes, I answer myself, yes they do.

Thus, it seems very, very obvious to me that taxation is a form of theft.

But since you are very sure that taxation can be voluntary, would you just explain to me, in as much detail as possible, exactly what such a voluntary would look like? How would it operate, how would it be collected, etc. Thanks.
 
LVT/the single tax comes first. The single tax is about the real economy, real work and innovation. The FED is part of the virtual world of credit and is therefore secondary (credit depends on work, work does not depend on credit). The FED's role, as part of the rentier-state is to protect the rentier sector (aka FIRE - finance.insurance.real-estate - sector). If we brought in the single tax it would kill off the rentier sector, so the FED would be effectively abolished.
Since the Fed's currency is both fiat and debt created and its partner in crime is the state, I am in effect paying rent for every dollar that i earn and again for every dollar i save. To say LVT will end this arrangement is a non sequitur. What's more, the state is nothing but rentiers in all its endeavors and LVT is merely trading private rentiers for public rentiers. I have but one axiom and one overriding desire. The axiom: The state solution is always the worst solution. My overriding desire, the desire that trumps all others is Freedom. Freedom even trumps the desire for equality, for i know, no form equality can happen absent Freedom.
 
Since the Fed's currency is both fiat and debt created and its partner in crime is the state, I am in effect paying rent for every dollar that i earn and again for every dollar i save. To say LVT will end this arrangement is a non sequitur. What's more, the state is nothing but rentiers in all its endeavors and LVT is merely trading private rentiers for public rentiers. I have but one axiom and one overriding desire. The axiom: The state solution is always the worst solution. My overriding desire, the desire that trumps all others is Freedom. Freedom even trumps the desire for equality, for i know, no form equality can happen absent Freedom.

OK - land reformers agree with monetry reform, so what is the next step? I say the single tax is the most doable reform and I have evidence - we came very near to a revulution exactly a century ago when Henry George's ideas were running rampant.
 
What are you smoking and where can I get some?

It's true, private monopoly of land is antithetical to self ownership, free association and non-agression. You cannot be a libertarian if you accept private monopoly of land.

The early libertarians all knew this.
Then the rentier state sent a generation of Liberals, libertarians, Progressives, socialists of all kinds - all different but united against the rentier - to war and buried them and the evidence in the land they wanted an equal share in.
 
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It's true, private monopoly of land is antithetical to self ownership, free association and non-agression. You cannot be a libertarian if you accept private monopoly of land.

Can one be a libertarian and accept private monopoly of chain saws?

Also, still would love an illustration and explanation of a voluntary tax. I can't imagine such a thing. You can! Help me out, here.
 
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