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by VikingCoder
1966 days ago
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It serves that purpose, but is the market as it exists today the best way for society to achieve that purpose? K-shaped recoveries make me think "I wish there were a better way." But I'm an idiot. So my best idea right now is, "When a business issues stock, they also have to issue an additional 20% to the government, and then we need to keep the tax rate low-ish on dividends, but increase the tax rate on capital gains - hopefully encouraging companies to pay dividends, which the government would receive." I'd appreciate if someone could tell me why my plan is awful. Because I'm sure it is, but I haven't been able to figure out why it's awful. |
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As it turns out, government is already entitled to N% of a company's profit, through corporate taxes. If you are greedy on behalf of the politicians and want N to be a bigger cut of that, that's one thing.
But if politicians want to boss companies around, they already have the option to go on record and pass neutral and generally-applicable laws to do that — and such laws are a fair sight better than the shady backroom deals that will go in when politicians start filling board seats with political apparatchiks. Do you want Donald Trump filling a board seat at Disney with someone like Jared Kushner? If you do, do you want Biden appointing his son Hunter to a board seat at Tesla? Can you imagine the insane conflicts of interest multiplied by the entire economy? It's bad enough already. We really, really don't need to glue together everything shady about big business with everything shadowy about government.
P.S. Oh, and the other thing is that people start raising capital and incorporating in ways that these confiscatory taxes and seizures of control that you propose just don't apply. More private equity, or just incorporating overseas.
P.P.S. Oh, it also favors the companies who don't need to raise capital on the markets: Apple can just take its cash hoarde and invest like crazy, while the next hot Silicon Valley player that would challenge them has to pay 20%.