Re: Hudson on AIG's Lawsuit
2 points:
The difference in your example is that the land has always existed and is not the result of anyone's labor whereas the capital equipment is.
Say my great great freat grandfather immigrated to America in the 18th century, pioneered to western tennessee and staked a claim to 5,000,000 acres. Should his descendants get to keep that land tax free simply b/c the pioneer was the first to show up? Some think so, but I think not. Say he discovers an oil well on the land. Does the pioneer and his descendants own the oil outright? Property law, thank goodness, says yes but oil is a scarce resource needed by all, should the owner get to keep all the profits from the oil produced even though he did not CREATE the oil (not saying he should not be rewarded for exploration and all the costs and risks incurred by getting the oil out of the ground), but it is the "free part" that should be taxed at a higher rate, the natural resources which already exists.
I appreciate Hudson writings b/c they allowed me to see this distinction although I likely do not agree with him on a lot of other points.
Hudson's "equitable solution" to the rentier is to tax profits from so called "free lunch" income and cycle those back for the "good" of the whole society. His complaint, at least the way I read him, is that the Rentiers are not only not being taxed like everyone else, but are getting incentives to engage in the rentier behavior (e.g., subsidized loans with deductible interest, reduced capital gains tax etc.). Don't get me wrong, I'm not for high taxes, but if you have to tax, then the "free lunch" income seems to be a good/equitable place to start.
Originally posted by raja
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The difference in your example is that the land has always existed and is not the result of anyone's labor whereas the capital equipment is.
Say my great great freat grandfather immigrated to America in the 18th century, pioneered to western tennessee and staked a claim to 5,000,000 acres. Should his descendants get to keep that land tax free simply b/c the pioneer was the first to show up? Some think so, but I think not. Say he discovers an oil well on the land. Does the pioneer and his descendants own the oil outright? Property law, thank goodness, says yes but oil is a scarce resource needed by all, should the owner get to keep all the profits from the oil produced even though he did not CREATE the oil (not saying he should not be rewarded for exploration and all the costs and risks incurred by getting the oil out of the ground), but it is the "free part" that should be taxed at a higher rate, the natural resources which already exists.
I appreciate Hudson writings b/c they allowed me to see this distinction although I likely do not agree with him on a lot of other points.
Hudson's "equitable solution" to the rentier is to tax profits from so called "free lunch" income and cycle those back for the "good" of the whole society. His complaint, at least the way I read him, is that the Rentiers are not only not being taxed like everyone else, but are getting incentives to engage in the rentier behavior (e.g., subsidized loans with deductible interest, reduced capital gains tax etc.). Don't get me wrong, I'm not for high taxes, but if you have to tax, then the "free lunch" income seems to be a good/equitable place to start.
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