| > I don't want to tax wealth at 90%, that's a straw-man, but let's use it as an example anyway My intent was only to use it as an example. You can change the percentage to anything you want, as long as it is low enough not to have an effect on Warren Buffett's consumption. And if it has an effect on Warren Buffett's consumption, then you could do the same thing with a consumption tax so that wouldn't be an argument for taxing wealth over taxing consumption. > In your extreme scenario, there would be an increased demand for food. Greater demand would increase prices. This would move the allocation of resources to food production from, say, Ferrari production. You would have more food production and poor people would eat better. Indeed. But this is just as true if the spending on food is funded by a consumption tax. This is an argument for taxes, not an argument for income or wealth taxes over consumption taxes. I also believe taxes are harmful in general, but that's a separate point from whether a consumption tax should be preferred over an income or wealth tax. > The outcomes of taxation and other economic levers are never represented by monotonic functions. The optimal options are always somewhere "in between" the extremes, I don't see why this ought to be true and you did not provide any evidence to support these claims. > so saying "taxing at 100% doesn't work, so we should tax at 0%" is a fallacy. It is, but not for the reason you stated. Saying "taxing at 2% doesn't work, so we should tax at 0%" would also be a fallacy if the optimal tax rate happened to be 1%. This has nothing to do with extremes. |
The problem is that eating food IS consumption. For very poor people, food is the main consumption. That's the bad of taxing consumption - that it naturally taxes more the poor, making them even poorer, than the rich.
>> The outcomes of taxation and other economic levers are never represented by monotonic functions. The optimal options are always somewhere "in between" the extremes,
> I don't see why this ought to be true and you did not provide any evidence to support these claims.
Of course, if you think that there should be no State - and therefore no taxes - you won't believe that. But if you admit that some public services are necessary (eg police, defense from external threats) then it's obvious that a 0 tax rate is bad - 0 taxes mean 0 public services.
On the other hand, 100% taxation would mean that there is nothing left for people to spend. That can't be good.
If the benefit from taxation is 0 at the extremes (0% and 100%), and non zero somewhere in between, then the curve can't be monotonic.