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by jjice
165 days ago
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> You are asking me about implementation difficulty, difficult implementation doesn't mean idea is not worth it. I can agree with that idea, to an extent. If something is near impossible (not saying this is), then it does become not worth it. The other questions the parent posed are more interesting to me: > How would you determine the worth of rare, illiquid or intangibles? What about wealth held in trusts or companies? How does the accounting work if I borrow against my wealth? What happens when things change value dramatically in a short period of time? Another I wonder is that (ignore all specifics of the values, just the concepts matter here), let's say you own a private business that then becomes valued at 1.5 billion dollars and this individual has 20 million dollars liquid. How do you tax that? The government can't take one third of the business, at least not without a lot of issues (in business dealings and individual rights), and the 20 million liquid wouldn't come close to what this plan would value. What do we do then? Plenty of billionaires don't really have liquid cash and forcing liquidation of assents in such a way seems like it would be very difficult. I'm all for more taxes on higher net worth individuals, but I think there's a lot of talk to be had on how one can implement this. It's going to be really difficult to find a way that makes sense. |
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FATCA law makes this very possible in the US.
> How do you tax that? The government can't take one third of the business, at least not without a lot of issues (in business dealings and individual rights)
I would say that the government can and should and simply be a passive share holder with no voting rights.