I would have posted the following in the I've Lost My Mind Just Now sub-forum, but that sub-forum is for those who are otherwise perfectly sane, and I figured I did not qualify.
How about we replace various income, sales and property taxes with a debt tax.
Anyone lending money in exchange for a future income stream would have to pay a tax on the value of the collateral backing that loan. Uncollateralized debt is not a problem; the lender simply loses on default. But leveraged collateralized debt becomes a problem when excess leverage places the risk of multiple claims of ownership on a single piece of property or a single income stream.
Insurance, derivatives and credit default swaps would be subject to the same tax. Take for example your medical insurance. You provide an income stream to the insurance company in exchange for the promise of a conditional large payment in the future. If you stop those payments before your "lucky" (gravely ill) day arrives, you lose your "collateral" (rights to that large payment that can keep you out of bankruptcy and pay for continuing medical services.)
In each case (debt, insurance or similar), whichever party normally enters into such contracts with the deeper financial resources would be the one to pay the tax, and the tax would be based on the value of what the other party risks losing in default.
We should tax that which we consider harmful to society in excess. Certainly debt and the various leveraging mechanisms of debt and insurance-like financial innovations are clearly on that harmful list when issued in excess.
Obviously this can't be done now, with Bozo the Clown's 535 closest cousins in Congress, and given that this tax would cause the U.S. Mortgage market to self-destruct within 24 hours. But if the Mortgage market can manage its own self-destruction anyway (seems likely) and if we can elect some competent and honest representatives (that's the hard part) then this should be a piece of cake.
How about we replace various income, sales and property taxes with a debt tax.
Anyone lending money in exchange for a future income stream would have to pay a tax on the value of the collateral backing that loan. Uncollateralized debt is not a problem; the lender simply loses on default. But leveraged collateralized debt becomes a problem when excess leverage places the risk of multiple claims of ownership on a single piece of property or a single income stream.
Insurance, derivatives and credit default swaps would be subject to the same tax. Take for example your medical insurance. You provide an income stream to the insurance company in exchange for the promise of a conditional large payment in the future. If you stop those payments before your "lucky" (gravely ill) day arrives, you lose your "collateral" (rights to that large payment that can keep you out of bankruptcy and pay for continuing medical services.)
In each case (debt, insurance or similar), whichever party normally enters into such contracts with the deeper financial resources would be the one to pay the tax, and the tax would be based on the value of what the other party risks losing in default.
We should tax that which we consider harmful to society in excess. Certainly debt and the various leveraging mechanisms of debt and insurance-like financial innovations are clearly on that harmful list when issued in excess.
Obviously this can't be done now, with Bozo the Clown's 535 closest cousins in Congress, and given that this tax would cause the U.S. Mortgage market to self-destruct within 24 hours. But if the Mortgage market can manage its own self-destruction anyway (seems likely) and if we can elect some competent and honest representatives (that's the hard part) then this should be a piece of cake.
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