Rawls
Nic Tideman:
Improving Efficiency and Preventing Exploitation in Taxing
and Spending Decisions
Two of the most troublesome features of taxation and
public spending are that taxation relies on coercion, and
that the combination of taxing and public spending
generates substantially haphazard redistribution. People
must pay their taxes on penalty of having their property
confiscated, or of going to jail. And we cannot say that
this process is for everyone's good.
There is reason to believe, though we do not have the
basis to say for sure, that some people receive much less
in benefits from public spending than they pay in taxes.
How do we justify the harm that is thereby done to some
persons by the combination of taxing and public spending?
I would like to address this question by first discussing
some possible justifications that might seem attractive,
but should be rejected.
- One possible justification is conservatism: Things have always been done
this way. Our institutions have evolved to solve social
problems that we may not even be aware of. Who knows
what terrible things might happen if we did things
differently?
There is an element of validity to the
conservative position, but not an adequate basis for
making conservatism the primary principle of social
organization. If we had adopted conservatism as the
primary principle of social organization centuries
ago, there would have been no end to slavery, no
women's suffrage, nor any of the numerous other
changes in social organization in response to
improvements in our moral understanding. It would be
foolhardy to assert that we will never experience
further improvements in our moral understanding that
will call for changes in social organization.
- A second possible justification of public spending
is majoritarianism: Once we
have voted we know the right thing to do. The
possibility of majority-rule cycles undermines the
simple-minded version of majoritarianism that says that
the majority is always right. Still, it would be
possible to assert that majorities should have their
way when cycles are not observed, and that when they
are observed, some device for cutting through cycles
can restore the viability of majoritarianism. However,
that would give free rein to any majority to exploit
any minority. That makes no sense as a theory of
justice. One could assert that voters, acting as judges
of what is best rather than as self-interested
advocates, have a claim to determine in a majoritarian
fashion what a collectivity ought to do. But then one
still needs a theory of the principles by which the
voters ought to judge.
- A third possible justification of public spending
is egalitarianism: People
should be required to provide as much for others as
they have themselves. This theory suffers from the
difficulties of vagueness and questionable
operationality. As much what? There is no way to ensure
that all persons will have equal quantities of such
valued things as affection, talent or self-confidence.
It is possible to imagine a crude egalitarianism of
goods, but only by eliminating all incentives to be
productive. If equality is traded off against some
other goal, then egalitarianism is no longer the first
principle.
Rawls manages to retain the primacy of egalitarianism
without destroying all incentives to be productive by the
maximin rule: Laws should be designed to maximize the
well-being of the least advantaged person. This
formulation, however, generates such anomalies as the
following: If there are three persons, and the choice is
either a distribution of $10,000, $12,000 and $50,0000,
or a distribution of $10,001, $10,002 and $80,000, the
maximin rule will select the latter, despite the
fact that it makes the middle income person, who is
already relatively poor, even poorer while making the
richest person noticeably richer. In Rawls's particular
formulation there is a further difficulty. He makes the
maximin rule lexically subordinate to the rule
that all persons should have the maximum individual
liberty that all can have. However, he does not deal with
the following problem: My individual liberty will be
unnecessarily restricted if I am not allowed to sing you
a song in exchange for a haircut (without being taxed),
but if I am allowed to do so without being taxed, the
maximin rule is not satisfied. If Rawls really does mean
to put individual liberty lexically first, no
redistributive income taxes would be permitted. ...
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Peter Barnes:
Capitalism 3.0 — Chapter 7: Universal Birthrights
(pages 101-116)
The standard argument against third wave universal
birthrights is that, while they might be nice in theory,
in practice they are too expensive. They impose an
unbearable burden on “the economy” —
that is, on the winners in unfettered markets. Much
better, therefore, to let everyone — including poor
children and the sick — fend for themselves. In
fact, the opposite is often true: universal birthrights,
as we’ll see, can be cheaper and more efficient
than individual acquisition. Moreover, they are always
fairer.
How far we might go down the path of extending
universal birthrights is anyone’s guess, but
we’re now at the point where, economically
speaking, we can afford to go farther. Without great
difficulty, we could add three birthrights to our
economic operating system: one would pay everyone a
regular dividend, the second would give every child a
start-up stake, and the third would reduce and share
medical costs. Whether we add these birthrights or not
isn’t a matter of economic ability, but of attitude
and politics.
Why attitude? Americans suffer from a number of
confusions. We think it’s “wrong” to
give people “something for nothing,” despite
the fact that corporations take common wealth for nothing
all the time. We believe the poor are poor and the rich
are rich because they deserve to be, but don’t
consider that millions of Americans work two or three
jobs and still can’t make ends meet. Plus, we think
tinkering with the “natural” distribution of
income is “socialism,” or “big
government,” or some other manifestation of evil,
despite the fact that our current distribution of income
isn’t “natural” at all, but rigged from
the get-go by maldistributed property.
The late John Rawls, one of America’s
leading philosophers, distinguished between pre
distribution of property and re distribution of
income. Under income re distribution, money is
taken from “winners” and transferred to
“losers.” Understandably, this isn’t
popular with winners, who tend to control government and
the media. Under property pre distribution, by contrast,
the playing field is leveled by spreading property
ownership before income is generated. After that,
there’s no need for income redistribution; property
itself distributes income to all. According to Rawls,
while income re distribution creates dependency,
property predistribution empowers.
But how can we spread property ownership without
taking property from some and giving it to others? The
answer lies in the commons — wealth that already
belongs to everyone. By propertizing (without
privatizing) some of that wealth, we can make everyone a
property owner.
What’s interesting is that, for purely
ecological reasons, we need to propertize (without
privatizing) some natural wealth now. This twenty-first
century necessity means we have a chance to save the
planet, and as a bonus, add a universal birthright. ...
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