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by int_19h
1697 days ago
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And? You don't pay capital gains on that. You pay it on the increase relative to the original cost to you (which you payed with already-taxed money). Why shouldn't the increase be taxed same as any other income? Or more, actually, since it's not earned by productive labor? |
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Additionally, the higher the capital gains tax, the higher the expected returns have to be. Lower capital gains incentivizes riskier investment, which, within reason, is a net positive for society.