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A wealth Tax Should Be Introduced In Australia (Read 11484 times)
Bam
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Re: A wealth Tax Should Be Introduced In Australia
Reply #30 - Jan 19th, 2022 at 9:21am
 
issuevoter wrote on Jan 18th, 2022 at 5:47pm:
Bam wrote on Jan 18th, 2022 at 4:22pm:
issuevoter wrote on Jan 18th, 2022 at 11:53am:
No new taxes.

Why? All you're doing is shooting down the idea of new taxes without debate or discussion. You're implying that the worst of the current taxes is better than the best tax that currently does not exist. That is not a sound proposition.

issuevoter wrote on Jan 18th, 2022 at 11:53am:
Make the ones we have, work.

No. Some of the current taxes are inefficient to collect, act as unnecessary disincentives, or have other issues. Payroll tax is one example of a bad tax because it is inequitable and discourages the creation of jobs. Replacing payroll tax with a single tax assessed on company turnover would replace an inefficient tax with one that is more efficient to assess.

issuevoter wrote on Jan 18th, 2022 at 11:53am:
The problem with regulation is that it feeds on itself. And there's a whole echelon of office-bludgers who are always inventing new ones, otherwise they might have to go out and get real job.

The post is discussing taxes, not regulations.

issuevoter wrote on Jan 18th, 2022 at 11:53am:
Wealth is not evil, but the Labor Party wants you to believe it is.

That last part is not true. Wealth is not inherently evil. The real evil is found amongst the rich who loot and hoard unearned wealth for themselves.


Like many Labor voters, you resent wealth.



Since you've decided to resort to strawman fallacies, you're accepting all points I raised without further discussion.

Good. That means you won't be making any further contributions to the topic.
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Re: A wealth Tax Should Be Introduced In Australia
Reply #31 - Jan 19th, 2022 at 9:33am
 
freediver wrote on Jan 19th, 2022 at 8:32am:
Quote:
No. Some of the current taxes are inefficient to collect, act as unnecessary disincentives, or have other issues. Payroll tax is one example of a bad tax because it is inequitable and discourages the creation of jobs. Replacing payroll tax with a single tax assessed on company turnover would replace an inefficient tax with one that is more efficient to assess.


A turnover tax is an even worse idea, if you are talking about unnecessary disincentives. It would skew the entire economy towards high margin business.

That is just your supposition, offered without any proof.

A 1% tax that replaces other taxes would not distort the economy as much as payroll taxes do. If you assert otherwise without proof I won't accept it.

You have also not proposed any alternative to payroll taxes or turnover taxes that ensures businesses make a contribution to the government-funded spending that they consume. What is your idea for replacing payroll taxes and broadening the company tax base? Go on, show us.
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Re: A wealth Tax Should Be Introduced In Australia
Reply #32 - Jan 19th, 2022 at 9:57am
 
Belgarion wrote on Jan 18th, 2022 at 5:55pm:
The likes of Rinehart, Forrest, Packer and their ilk certainly need to be taxed according to their wealth without being able to use any loopholes or tax havens to avoid it. However tax laws made with the best of intentions usually end up working against the ordinary worker instead of ensuring the ultra wealthy pay their share. 

The billionaires are not contributing enough so everyone else has to pay more.

A possible way of ensuring the rich pay more without affecting most workers would be limiting tax deductions in any one financial year to $10 million, or another similarly high figure that most people (maybe 99.99%) won't reach.

Or individual tax deductions can be limited. The "tax advice" deduction is particularly prone to abuse. If anyone is spending a million dollars a year on "tax advice", that's unlikely to be legitimate (especially if this money just happens to end up being paid to family members). A limit of $10,000 a year should be plenty for most people, and this should be paid to qualified accountants, not an income stream for the kids.
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Belgarion
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Re: A wealth Tax Should Be Introduced In Australia
Reply #33 - Jan 19th, 2022 at 10:06am
 
Bam wrote on Jan 19th, 2022 at 9:57am:
Belgarion wrote on Jan 18th, 2022 at 5:55pm:
The likes of Rinehart, Forrest, Packer and their ilk certainly need to be taxed according to their wealth without being able to use any loopholes or tax havens to avoid it. However tax laws made with the best of intentions usually end up working against the ordinary worker instead of ensuring the ultra wealthy pay their share. 

The billionaires are not contributing enough so everyone else has to pay more.

A possible way of ensuring the rich pay more without affecting most workers would be limiting tax deductions in any one financial year to $10 million, or another similarly high figure that most people (maybe 99.99%) won't reach.

Or individual tax deductions can be limited. The "tax advice" deduction is particularly prone to abuse. If anyone is spending a million dollars a year on "tax advice", that's unlikely to be legitimate (especially if this money just happens to end up being paid to family members). A limit of $10,000 a year should be plenty for most people, and this should be paid to qualified accountants, not an income stream for the kids.


I like the idea of limiting deductions. This could work.
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Re: A wealth Tax Should Be Introduced In Australia
Reply #34 - Jan 19th, 2022 at 11:24am
 
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Re: A wealth Tax Should Be Introduced In Australia
Reply #35 - Jan 19th, 2022 at 11:59am
 
Belgarion wrote on Jan 19th, 2022 at 10:06am:
Bam wrote on Jan 19th, 2022 at 9:57am:
Belgarion wrote on Jan 18th, 2022 at 5:55pm:
The likes of Rinehart, Forrest, Packer and their ilk certainly need to be taxed according to their wealth without being able to use any loopholes or tax havens to avoid it. However tax laws made with the best of intentions usually end up working against the ordinary worker instead of ensuring the ultra wealthy pay their share. 

The billionaires are not contributing enough so everyone else has to pay more.

A possible way of ensuring the rich pay more without affecting most workers would be limiting tax deductions in any one financial year to $10 million, or another similarly high figure that most people (maybe 99.99%) won't reach.

Or individual tax deductions can be limited. The "tax advice" deduction is particularly prone to abuse. If anyone is spending a million dollars a year on "tax advice", that's unlikely to be legitimate (especially if this money just happens to end up being paid to family members). A limit of $10,000 a year should be plenty for most people, and this should be paid to qualified accountants, not an income stream for the kids.


I like the idea of limiting deductions. This could work.

Yes it could work.

A possible problem with it is the possibility of structuring tax affairs so that any extra tax deductions are shifted into future years. However, this can't be done indefinitely because people don't live indefinitely. Any unclaimed deductions would be forfeited on death.

Another possible problem is structuring finances so other people (such as family members) can claim the deductions instead. However, that behaviour would be likely to attract audits.
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Re: A wealth Tax Should Be Introduced In Australia
Reply #36 - Jan 19th, 2022 at 12:40pm
 
Bam wrote on Jan 19th, 2022 at 9:33am:
freediver wrote on Jan 19th, 2022 at 8:32am:
Quote:
No. Some of the current taxes are inefficient to collect, act as unnecessary disincentives, or have other issues. Payroll tax is one example of a bad tax because it is inequitable and discourages the creation of jobs. Replacing payroll tax with a single tax assessed on company turnover would replace an inefficient tax with one that is more efficient to assess.


A turnover tax is an even worse idea, if you are talking about unnecessary disincentives. It would skew the entire economy towards high margin business.

That is just your supposition, offered without any proof.


I was hoping you might think for yourself. I guess that was too much to ask.

Quote:
A 1% tax that replaces other taxes would not distort the economy as much as payroll taxes do. If you assert otherwise without proof I won't accept it.


Do you have any proof of your claim?

Quote:
You have also not proposed any alternative to payroll taxes or turnover taxes that ensures businesses make a contribution to the government-funded spending that they consume. What is your idea for replacing payroll taxes and broadening the company tax base? Go on, show us.


What makes you think I want to replace anything?
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Re: A wealth Tax Should Be Introduced In Australia
Reply #37 - Jan 19th, 2022 at 3:10pm
 
Perhaps common sense shoukd prevail.

Any grubberment who finds a way to take more money from the rich.

Will in no way pass any of it back down to the poor.

When howard the coward got his GST, there was so much money coming on that hecwas embarrassed to say how much there was.
But it only took 3 years for him and the rest of the parasites to find a way to spend it and more.
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Re: A wealth Tax Should Be Introduced In Australia
Reply #38 - Jan 19th, 2022 at 4:26pm
 
freediver wrote on Jan 19th, 2022 at 12:40pm:
Bam wrote on Jan 19th, 2022 at 9:33am:
freediver wrote on Jan 19th, 2022 at 8:32am:
Quote:
No. Some of the current taxes are inefficient to collect, act as unnecessary disincentives, or have other issues. Payroll tax is one example of a bad tax because it is inequitable and discourages the creation of jobs. Replacing payroll tax with a single tax assessed on company turnover would replace an inefficient tax with one that is more efficient to assess.


A turnover tax is an even worse idea, if you are talking about unnecessary disincentives. It would skew the entire economy towards high margin business.

That is just your supposition, offered without any proof.


I was hoping you might think for yourself. I guess that was too much to ask.

That is the burden of proof fallacy. YOU made the claim, YOU prove it. It is NOT up to me to prove it for you.

freediver wrote on Jan 19th, 2022 at 12:40pm:
Quote:
A 1% tax that replaces other taxes would not distort the economy as much as payroll taxes do. If you assert otherwise without proof I won't accept it.


Do you have any proof of your claim?

Payroll taxes are state-based taxes with different rates in different states. These are usually adjusted every year in various state budgets. Keeping track of these different rates adds a compliance burden on businesses, especially those businesses with offices in multiple states.

Payroll taxes have a threshold where no tax is payable. If a business exceeds that threshold, they must start paying payroll tax. Any business that is close to the threshold may be discouraged from hiring additional staff due to payroll tax. This threshold is typically around 15 full-time staff.

Payroll taxes give an incentive to reduce the pay of workers. This is strongest near the payroll tax threshold.

freediver wrote on Jan 19th, 2022 at 12:40pm:
Quote:
You have also not proposed any alternative to payroll taxes or turnover taxes that ensures businesses make a contribution to the government-funded spending that they consume. What is your idea for replacing payroll taxes and broadening the company tax base? Go on, show us.


What makes you think I want to replace anything?

Critics who won't offer alternatives are like eunuchs in a harem. Don't be a eunuch.
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Re: A wealth Tax Should Be Introduced In Australia
Reply #39 - Jan 19th, 2022 at 5:26pm
 
The payroll tax sounds like a good candidate to be replaced with the GST.
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Re: A wealth Tax Should Be Introduced In Australia
Reply #40 - Jan 19th, 2022 at 6:30pm
 
Lisa Jones wrote on Jan 18th, 2022 at 8:53pm:
Frank wrote on Jan 18th, 2022 at 8:48pm:
You can't have a discussion when the meaning of ordinary words are to be disputed first. It just demonstrated and emphasises that the disputants are not standing on the same ground.


Exactly!
My notion of "being wealthy" might be very different to yours.


This whole debate demonstrates why the public sector must be able to finance itself, ie, the sovereign currency-issuing  government must be authorized to create its own funds out of thin air,  using its own treasury and central bank.

Thus avoiding the never-ending disputation between private sector individuals re who will pay for public sector spending.

Note: the sovereign currency-issuer is constrained by available resources and the nation' productive capacity, NOT money....which is indeed the constraint facing you and me.

But this simple reality is so removed from individuals' own lived experience, we recoil from it.  Or think inflation will result, not understanding inflation is a resource availability issue, not a quantity of money issue (since money is created out of thin air whether in private banks, or the nation's treasury).   

http://moslereconomics.com/mandatory-readings/innocent-frauds/

Truth is: "money doesn't grow on rich people" (Stephanie Kelton) ....so we don't need to tax the wealthy  to fund a Job Guarantee, or decent aged-care, age-pensions, healthcare, or education.

Anyway carry on.

Unfortunately most of you would only be convinced if a 'decent' covid variant  appeared,  which forced everyone (except farmers and drivers etc)  into lockdown for a year or more (to avoid catching a truly deadly version of covid capable of killing, eg, half the population who caught it).

Then we would all see the government simply changing (via treasury's computers) the digits in the bank accounts of all locked down workers, so they could pay essential  bills (food rent utilities), without taxing or borrowing money from anyone, (and no job keeper/seeker) for as long as the pandemic lasted....because the government  can't run out of money.... 
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« Last Edit: Jan 19th, 2022 at 6:44pm by thegreatdivide »  
 
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Re: A wealth Tax Should Be Introduced In Australia
Reply #41 - Jan 19th, 2022 at 6:38pm
 
Quote:
Or think inflation will result, not understanding inflation is a resource availability issue, not a quantity of money issue (since money is created out of thin air whether in private banks, or the nation's treasury).


Inflation does result. Also, the government funding itself by printing money ends up having the same effect as a tax on people's savings.
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Re: A wealth Tax Should Be Introduced In Australia
Reply #42 - Jan 20th, 2022 at 11:20am
 
freediver wrote on Jan 19th, 2022 at 6:38pm:
[quote]Inflation does result.


Wrong. Inflation is always a result of rising supply constraints, following market failure; and therein lies the problem - the market economy is inadequate as a basis for a functional economy in which sustainable growth with minimum above-poverty employment for all can always be assured.

eg, as to so-called "inflation" in the US currently: it's absurd that food, fuel, and rent prices are rising, because there is no REAL shortage of these things, only supply blockages caused by the pandemic.
The correct solution as I hinted (in the pandemic) is a suspension of the free market and government-created money credited to workers banks accounts via the treasury's computer to keep citizens alive while in lock-down. 
No "inflation". (Pouring money into job keeper was poor policy, risking too much cash in the hands of consumers when the pandemic ended).

So your argument fails BECAUSE it assumes an unregulated  market economy must be the basis of the economy, which is by no means the case.      

Quote:
Also, the government funding itself by printing money ends up having the same effect as a tax on people's savings.


Wrong. So long as there is no resource shortage, there will be no 'inflation' which might affect peoples' savings. 
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Re: A wealth Tax Should Be Introduced In Australia
Reply #43 - Jan 20th, 2022 at 5:56pm
 
thegreatdivide wrote on Jan 20th, 2022 at 11:20am:
freediver wrote on Jan 19th, 2022 at 6:38pm:
[quote]Inflation does result.


Wrong. Inflation is always a result of rising supply constraints, following market failure; and therein lies the problem - the market economy is inadequate as a basis for a functional economy in which sustainable growth with minimum above-poverty employment for all can always be assured.

eg, as to so-called "inflation" in the US currently: it's absurd that food, fuel, and rent prices are rising, because there is no REAL shortage of these things, only supply blockages caused by the pandemic.
The correct solution as I hinted (in the pandemic) is a suspension of the free market and government-created money credited to workers banks accounts via the treasury's computer to keep citizens alive while in lock-down. 
No "inflation". (Pouring money into job keeper was poor policy, risking too much cash in the hands of consumers when the pandemic ended).

So your argument fails BECAUSE it assumes an unregulated  market economy must be the basis of the economy, which is by no means the case.      

Quote:
Also, the government funding itself by printing money ends up having the same effect as a tax on people's savings.


Wrong. So long as there is no resource shortage, there will be no 'inflation' which might affect peoples' savings. 


Where are you getting this crap from?
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Re: A wealth Tax Should Be Introduced In Australia
Reply #44 - Jan 21st, 2022 at 2:18pm
 
freediver wrote on Jan 20th, 2022 at 5:56pm:
Where are you getting this crap from?


Oh.... people like Gittins and Kohler:

http://www.rossgittins.com/2021/03/funding-budget-by-printing-money-is.html




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