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by Aunche
1581 days ago
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>Yet when Bill Gates or Bezos want to sell off their stock to fund their various hobbies they have no problem doing so. That's because they don't actually spend that much of their wealth. If Bezos and Musk spent their entire fortune on their space companies, rockets technology would improve, but not to the scale of $300+ billion. Once they approach a certain level, every rocket scientist is working at maximum capacity our pipeline of training becomes bottlenecked. >If we tax their wealth and a lot of it turned out to be smoke and mirrors that will, if anything, aid price discovery and lead to more efficient markets I would agree if I could trust politicians with that amount of responsibility, but I don't. The majority of them don't seem to understand basic supply and demand or are intentionally pretending not to so they can pander to their voters. |
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From what I remember Bill Gates is on track to spend almost all of it.
I've always found the idea that billionaire wealth isnt "real" because liquidating it all simultaneously is impractical to be unconvincing in the extreme, verging on dishonest.
>I would agree if I could trust politicians with that amount of responsibility
Politicians are not actually restrained by taxation as decades of persistent deficits prove.
I find it helps to consider a thought experiment: what if every dollar taxed was burned to a crisp and every dollar spent by government was printed?
The answer is nothing. Taxation exerts a deflationary effect and spending exerts an inflationary effect.
The question I ask when I consider if a higher tax is necessary is "are inflationary pressures too high?"
I think it's clear that inflationary pressures in housing and asset markets is off the scale.