There is a problem with the premise of this thread...the only way for the two burdens to equal, would be for the two people to take home exactly the same amount of income. I understand what you are trying to get at Boone, but if you use burden as the measuring stick, then we do all in fact have to take home the exact same (controlling for dependents, etc)[Edited on June 10, 2008 at 9:05 PM. Reason : .]
6/10/2008 9:05:22 PM
6/10/2008 10:01:15 PM
6/10/2008 10:01:46 PM
I guess then the question is what constitues an equal "share". Persoanlly I don't feel that our current system of structuring is that far off.If I had my way, I'd prolly lower corporate taxes (about 5% across the scale), raise capital gains taxes (20%), and keep individual income taxes about where they are. That said, I agree the system we have is overly complex and could use significant simplification, but I'd like to see it happen without many fundamental changes.
6/10/2008 10:39:29 PM
6/10/2008 11:06:11 PM
I seem to have offended you in some way, Megaloman. I thought we were having a debate, not making personal attacks.That being said...actually, no. You're an ass, and you subscribe to a silly philosophy that most people realize is ridiculous and impossible by the time they're 17. Moving on to the actual argument...My point is that this stuff that "we" are making is largely made in other places now. This means that the stuff that American companies make isn't made by Americans, so Americans are not being paid for making it. They pay an American company in the American dollars, yes, but these companies pay lower wages in other currency, in other places, for the services. Since we're breaking things down so they're easy.My beef isn't with foreign trade - that's necessary and a good thing. Hell, my beef isn't with you. My point is that skilled and unskilled manufacturing jobs have been leaving this country for a couple of decades, and it's causing hardship. I don't like hardship, even other peoples', due to my human trait of empathy. Is it making businesses a lot of money? Sure, and if that's your only measure of whether something is good or bad then it's a fine system. I'm a little curious who is actually receiving these large quantities of green paper, because it's surely not most of us, and how their decisions affect other people.If you're worried about me destroying civilization, I promise you, I will do my best not to bring Western culture to its knees for at least ten years. Plenty long enough for you to move to Montana, build a compound, and secede from the Union.
6/10/2008 11:29:58 PM
6/11/2008 12:10:30 AM
Sorry, Duke, I was responding to Megaloman. "The expense of others" thing just refers to an expectation of a reasonable wage, the right to negotiate collectively, and exploitive practices like the ones used by some corporations in poorer countries, where people work long hours for poverty wages while corporations influence local government not to get involved, Chiquita/Dole-type stuff.
6/11/2008 12:21:30 AM
Ok, I'm with you on those things.
6/11/2008 12:39:36 AM
6/11/2008 4:12:10 AM
6/11/2008 8:30:05 AM
6/11/2008 8:53:19 AM
6/11/2008 9:04:13 AM
If everyone takes home the same percentage of income.. yes. Now the individual is more in control of thier take home. To take a bigger percentage from one simply bc they showed up to work is wrong.
6/11/2008 9:07:14 AM
6/11/2008 9:11:10 AM
6/11/2008 9:15:47 AM
are you serious boone? Ok, if the lakers showed up to play the celtics and the league decided that the lakers are taller nd had an advantage, so they spot the celtics 20 points. Im sure you would say.. OH, thats progressive.Ive said it a thousand times. Its equality my friend. The govt should treat its citizens as equals. And if everyone is payign the same percentage, and taking home the same percentage then that is equality.
6/11/2008 9:20:30 AM
The thing is, since the wealthy do pay a huge percentage of individual income taxes, if you want everyone to pay the same percentage, then we're all going to be paying ~30%, not ~15%.
6/11/2008 9:25:42 AM
Just a side note - While the wealthiest in the U.S. have been paying about 35% individual income tax or less since 1987, which for a lot of us at least since we've been paying attention, from 1917-1986 the rate was much higher.From 1925-1931 there was actually a window where is was lower (25%, ironic as that is the start of the depression), and from 1921-1924 it was between 46-56%, but the rest of the time it was over 60%.But for 45 years it was over 70%, from 1936 to 1981, actually hitting over 90% several times in that period.
6/11/2008 9:36:36 AM
I think 15% is a good number. Seems fair to me. I dont know what the numbers would do to our income level, but my thought is that people having more money will create an economic boom and our govt may actually take in more revenue. Also, doing away with tax excemptions make more of the rich money in play. The ubber rich are very talented at hiding money.The problem is that even if the govt discussed running a 15% flat tax. There would be more people focused on the "break" it gives the rich than the equality or benefits it would bring about. But there is alot of envy in this country.If i had my choice there would be no income tax, just sales tax. But the flattax is the next best thing.
6/11/2008 9:39:37 AM
First thing to do if you want 15% income taxes is to figure out how to get to $500B in spending cuts to make up for the difference.
6/11/2008 9:52:00 AM
Well the first thing to do is not elect someone proposing 250B in additional spending.Where did you get 500B? If it forces them to cut spending.. im all for it.
6/11/2008 9:54:13 AM
Inlays from individual income taxes are about $1.1T annually. Actually in the short term you'd prolly need more than $500B, as the wealthy pay most of the taxes, and their tax is declining by more than 50%, but I just picked 50% for simplicities sake.In the long run stimulus will make up some of that difference, but no one really knows to what degree, and for the first few years you'll need to do something about the shortfall.
6/11/2008 9:59:52 AM
6/11/2008 10:50:08 AM
6/11/2008 11:09:09 AM
if everyone pays 15% income tax we will not be going to war anyone new anytime soon.
6/11/2008 11:23:15 AM
6/11/2008 1:31:54 PM
"Government is like a baby: An alimentary canal with a big appetite at one end and no sense of responsibility at the other." - Ronald ReaganGovernment's view of the economy could be summed up in a few short phrases: If it moves, tax it. If it keeps moving, regulate it. And if it stops moving, subsidize it." - Ronald Reagan Two of my favorite quotes. Govt doenst have a set number in mind when they tax. They will take whatever they can.[Edited on June 11, 2008 at 2:00 PM. Reason : .]
6/11/2008 1:57:17 PM
6/11/2008 2:20:04 PM
Benefits of foreign trade aside, the original point is that people here are losing the good jobs they had. I'm not seeing how this is not an objective fact, we're all aware of the fact that the national manufacturing base is gone. It's moved. We can go get in a car and I'll show you closed factories. I don't think anyone's seriously suggested that we should end foreign trade outright. If the benefit outweighs the cost, then it can be justified economically. My concern is that many people no longer have those good jobs where they make the greater-than-median income you cited. If this drop in income doesn't hurt them, it's not a big deal. But would you take a substantial drop in pay and not be upset about it? I'm hoping to figure out some "best of both worlds" scenario here.Let me throw in a genuine question here, Megaloman. If you can answer it without insults, that'd be wonderful. Is the money/product we're receiving back as a result of the trade you're talking about coming back here in similar amounts, given exchange rate shifts and other economic forces?
6/11/2008 2:49:05 PM
JPrater, you seem to have missed my post: "Preventing the trade would cause substantially more hardship. Yes, it would be less focused, but it would be real all the same. Try to remember the Walmart motto: save money, live better. And this is the truth of it. Manufacturing workers are not poor people, they tend to earn substantially more than the median U.S. worker. As such, if we assume trade is reducing the income of manufacturing workers, then it is simply bringing it down closer to the U.S. median and pulling up the wages of foreign workers, which tend to earn substantially less than U.S. workers. Meanwhile, the trade is also reducing prices in stores such as Walmart, where the poorest among us tend to shop. Therefore, here we have a transfer of income between members of our society: from U.S. manufacturing workers to foreign workers in the form of jobs and America's poor in the form of low prices. You seem to be getting distracted by the profits of the companies involved. Trust me, were it not for trade these companies would not be losing money; markets would adjust to keep them profitable no matter what trade policy the government implements. Then again, depending on the company, it is probable that they would be even more profitable in a world without foreign competition to driving down prices."
6/11/2008 3:32:34 PM
I didn't miss it, it just read like "They can shop at Walmart and it'll be okay" for the first half. Maybe I'm not getting the question out right.
6/11/2008 3:39:11 PM
6/11/2008 9:49:11 PM
problem with flat tax is that it will never happen.There, I said it.
6/11/2008 10:02:09 PM
6/12/2008 9:05:39 AM
6/12/2008 10:32:28 AM
So the point is, no matter what happens, people are screwed?Sorry, it's mostly a pretext to suggest a move to a thread on foreign trade policy.
6/12/2008 11:24:22 AM
Not at all, the "creative" part of "creative destruction" means that better jobs are always being, surprise, surprise, created. Automation creates higher wage jobs because it increases productivity. Trade creates jobs in export industries and industries that require or benefit from imported inputs. Both decrease prices, so people have more to spend on other things, voila, more jobs in those industries.If you caught a negative vibe off my last post, it was because I was emphasizing the negativity of protectionism.
6/12/2008 11:44:32 AM
^I understand what you're saying. I've got a question I'll put in the other thread, because I pretty much always have one more.Does anyone have numbers on what a viable percentage for our hypothetical flat tax would be? We've been kicking around 15 and 20%, and there are claims out there that once things are leveled off, those should be sufficient, but are there studies out there that back up our estimates?
6/12/2008 11:49:55 AM
6/12/2008 4:02:41 PM
yes, it is quite possible for higher tarriffs to be better than higher payroll taxes. But I find it unlikely that this would be a common case.
6/12/2008 6:20:48 PM
^The effect comes from altering the terms of trade when one nation has monopoly power in some market. The most common example is French wine.France imposes a tariff of foreign wine and other beverages. This increases French consumption of French wine, which in turn drives up the price of french wine. The direct effect is to lower the purchasing power of French citizens but there is an indirect effect.French wine becomes more expensive abroad, yet people still buy it because there is some monopoly power associated with French wine. The increase in the price of the wine, improves the terms of trade for France and more than makes up for the orginal decrease in purchasing power.The orginal article on the is "Increasing Returns, Monopolistic Competition, and International Trade" and is what made Paul Krugman a star.Also Seater at NC State has two sector model in which the benefits from trade depend on absolute rather than comparative advantage. Its been a while since I looked at the paper but basically I think if you get stuck in the wrong sector then your growth rate can be limited by the rate of savings of the other nation, which may be lower than your own.[Edited on June 12, 2008 at 7:20 PM. Reason : seater]
6/12/2008 7:14:34 PM
A clever point, I had not looked at it that way. However, even then the added revenue are not a product of the trade barrier; the trade barrier is merely one clever solution to a common collective action problem, and there is more than one way to skin that cat. Namely, if all the french wineries were owned by a single company then the same result could be achieved simply by demanding monopoly prices from foreigners, no governmental action needed. Similarly, private investors could accomplish this by buying and shutting down marginal wine producing regions in France, cutting production and achieving monopoly pricing. Of course, all of these fail if foreigners are willing to drink non-french wine. But, ok, as clever as that is, that would be an export tarriff. Do you know of a similarly clever mechanism for a country to pull a similar trick with a tarriff on imports?
6/12/2008 10:51:31 PM
i got mixed up... sorry about that. Now that I have re-read it, it is no longer a given that the result will be what you say it is. Specifically, if the supply of french wine is extremely ellastic then the harm inflicted upon french wine drinkers could be substantially higher (they would be happy to pay more for foreign wine, but not as much as the tarriff demands) than the small benefits to french wine producers from higher prices. It would be far more efficient to impose an export tarriff, thus accruing monopoly pricing against foreigners without harming domestic consumers at all, which both get cheap french wine and access to foreign wine. That would be elegant and always work whenever you enjoyed a monopoly position, hence why I assumed that was what you said. But an import tarriff to drive up export prices would, in my opinion, almost always cause more harm than benefits, even if you have a monopoly position.
6/13/2008 8:55:07 AM