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Wealth and Want | |||||||
... because democracy alone is not enough to produce widely shared prosperity. | |||||||
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Deficit and Public Debt
There is a proposal that tax
increases be allowed only with a two-thirds majority of
both houses of Congress. That has some merit, but
it carries a risk of excessive deficits. It also allows
the existing level of taxation to go unquestioned.
It would probably be better to have a
rule that every spending proposal must be approved by a
two-thirds majority of both houses of Congress to be
enacted. Maybe three-fourths. If spending is truly
worthwhile, then, as Wicksell said, there is a way of
financing it that will secure the approval of nearly
everyone. ... Read
the whole article Nic Tideman: A Bill of Economic Rights and Obligations
... In fulfilling its obligation to ensure that
future generations had opportunities at least as great as
those of the present generation, people would want to
take account of:
1. The amount of land per capita, adjusted for the quality of land; Decreases in some items could be
offset by increases in others. If people wanted to have
more children than could be provided with opportunities
equal to those of the present generation, Congress and
state legislatures would have an obligation to tax those
who wanted to have children, so that people would have
fewer children, and so that all children could be provided
with an initial endowment upon attaining maturity, to
compensate for reductions in other items on the list.
Read
the entire article Mason Gaffney: Rent, Taxation, Dissipation and Federalism
I. The issue
II. Sources of rent
III. Dissipation of rent before the fisc takes it: what and how?
A. Dissipation means waste and destruction or
suppression.
B. How rent is dissipated. C. Open access followed by tenure: rent-seeking institutions.
IV. Dissipating rent via public
spending
A. Taxes and lease provisions need not twist
incentives.
B. Public spending of tax proceeds may dissipate rent. C. History of recognition of this spending effect D. Successful compromises with the principle.
1. Barriers to immigration or sharing. E. Less successful compromises with the
principle2. Selling voters on the benefits of immigration
1. Public works.
2. Subsidized public works in tandem with exclusionary zoning 3. Hocking the revenues
V. Solutions
A. Socialize rent at the national level. B. Limit benefits to citizens per se (not to landowners per se). C. A social dividend to citizens is the obvious route. D. Return rents to local school districts in inverse proportion to local tax base per capita (the Colin Clark principle). E. Promote James Madison and Neville Chamberlain to elder statesmen emeritus. Borrowing to spend worsens the public works problems. Worse yet is borrowing to pay for current services, with some admixture of graft, as the NYC bankruptcy illustrated, and much 3d-world borrowing illustrates today on a wider canvas. Read the whole article
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Wealth and Want
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... because democracy alone hasn't yet led to a society
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