As much as I loathe taxation from a fundamentally philosophical standpoint, I think a 20-30x multiple of the minimum (or perhaps a 10-20x multiple of the median) wage is a good floor for income taxes.
Personally, I find it problematic philosophically that others can unilaterally take your property, but I understand it is practically necessary and justified by agreement to the social contract being implied by one's continued voluntary presence in such polity.
You might not have personally agreed - but society has ( as least in a democracy ).
The whole point of centralised laws is it's much more efficient than negotiating with everyone you meet as to whether they will k!ll you and/or take or stuff or not.
The scale of interactions in modern societies requires simplification of the management of those interactions - laws and enforcement of - what's allow or not is decided once, not every interaction.
Yeah, like I originally said, even if you don't agree with your taxes specifically, you agree to them as part of society by continuing to exist inside in it. By my philosophy, taxes are justified as long as you have the theoretical legal right to emigrate.
It was your parents decision which nationality you have, by accepting the nationality they accepted the rules and costs, so no officious intermedler.
BTW without governments opayed through taxes things like officious intermedler doctrine wouldn't exist instead you get the good old nice-place-you-got-there-be-a-shame-if-anything-happened-to-it doctrine.
Nice place you got here. Be a shame if anything happened to it
You can't give somebody something unrequested and then demand payment. Otherwise people could send you parcels you haven't ordered and then charge you.
So he is saying he hasn't asked for the government services but is been forced to pay for them. The obvious answer is that by being a member of society you have implicitly agreed to it's rules - you can't pick and choose.
The obvious answer is that by being a member of society you have implicitly agreed to it's rules
That's such nonsense though, since as an individual you have virtually no impact on anything unless you were born into extreme wealth. No government that I'm aware of operates hypothecation (where you can specify what your taxes get used for), and voting for representatives based on policy commitments is crude, unreliable, and too slow to be adequately responsive. Nobody in the private sector has a job where they are only subject to performance review every 2/4/6 years.
In the US, few people truly support the roughly $1 trillion annual cost of 'defense' and nobody thinks it's efficiently allocated, but any proposals to significantly cut that sum are political suicide so it's never going to happen. Much of our current political angst stems from people's intuitive awareness that their taxes are a real fact of life whereas their influence on the political process is largely notional.
I'd argue that the democratic ties between the people and the actions of the government in the US are extremely fragile - money is more important than people now in the US electoral system.
Another American disease is to then extrapolate that malaise and assume the rest of the world is in a similar position.
The solution isn't to dissolve society - that removes the only mechanism ( government ) that the majority have to control the powerful, further entrenching the power of the rich.
The solution is to take money out of US politics and get it working again for the majority,
More directly, property is a social construct. A useful one, yes, and one we consider a right. But that doesn't make tax unfair. Good luck enforcing your property rights without a society, and preferably without violence.
The real world tends not to be full of absolutes. It's unhelpfully reductive to go from "property is a right" to "taxation is theft".
If that were so, then people without any property would be exempt from tax. I'm not arguing against all taxation per se, but a lot of 'philosophical' arguments of tax proponents are as specious as those of tax opponents.
Well the state can also unilaterally take your life ( depending in the country ) and certainly your liberty.
And the above is a trade-off, the state polices & punishes murder and theft etc, with an aim of reducing it overall - so you are less likely to be murdered or stolen from.
Then this central mechanism needs paying for. Tax is simply a way of paying for it - and it's not voluntary to stop free-riders.
The reality is you need government & laws when people start living in complex societies where people are no longer self-sufficient, but rely on a complex web of interactions.
Laws are there to arbitrate between people - if you live on a homestead in the mountains they may seem unnecessary - if you live in a big city, where even essentials like food and water depend on a complex web of interactions - they are essential.
"Property" only exists so far as there is law enforcing it and the infrastructure to support it. Taxation is not someone stealing your money, it is the buy-in to a system that allows you to reliably consider things you have to be your property.
And you’d be spending resources on securing it and keeping it in your hands. Taxes are to buy in to a system that lets you sit at peace and not be constantly vigilant.
You're spending those resources regardless, at least you get to be the deciding how much to spend, and where, rather than having that decision taken from you
Taxation of labour is not somebody stealing your property, it is somebody stealing your work – which is a thousand times worse, since it is a form of forced servitude. There is no "system" and has never been any system, there's only people exploiting other people. An income tax is just a fancy abstraction over ancient and base serfdom. Most labourers have no property to speak of, and never had.
If it's a "buy-in" to a system people should have a way to "buy out" as well, which of course doesn't happen, because there never was any "buy-in", it was "pay us your wages or we'll hunt you down". Slaves could buy their own freedom in Rome and other places, so why can't "free" people under taxation?
Property rights should rank far lower than human rights. So if you want to collect taxes, go after property instead of after people. But it is the property owning class who runs the two-sided coin of capitalism/socialism, so good luck on that.
Libertarians as an example. I don't agree with them. I think many of the people objecting to taxes have a rather rosy view of the times when taxes didn't exist.
To me it's like similar to full communism, both of them mean well but in practice don't work well.
If you get more out of a system than someone else you should be probably willing or want too contribute more to it's upkeep.
Oh they know, they just discount it for some reason. Also, as a general rule, libertarians seem to care less for civilization than the rest of us. Hence why they're way more likely to be attracted to self-sufficient/off-the-grid/prepper lifestyles.
> What philosophical premise finds objection with taxation in general??
Extreme libertarianism, which is seriously flawed, but people still fall for it (out of greed and/or seduction by an oversimple toy model that can't actually work in practice).
I think it is philosophically sound that property rights are natural rights and that use of violent coercion to violate those rights is a basic violation of human rights.
You may believe that a violation of people’s natural rights to own things and be free from violent coercion is justified in service of building a central government, but it is still a human rights violation.
Surely all it is, is something most people agree on.
Take ownership of land for example - doesn't really make sense - at some point it wasn't 'owned' then somebody declared they owned it and could pass that right on in perpetuity.
Such a construct doesn't exist outside a system of laws ( created from an agreement from the majority of people ) - it's not some magic 'natural right'.
I don’t believe that land ownership is a natural right, for the same reasons that I believe that personal property is. They are very different concepts.
Personal property is made from a bit of the earth - space dust that has aggregated by gravity.
Again there is no 'natural right' - just something most people agree makes sense.
The idea of rights was a tool to try to get wide agreement ( internationally ) on the basics that most people agree on whatever culture. It's a useful tool - but to imbue some sort of existence outside society is an attempt at a Jedi mind trick.
Sales tax can't really exclude people based on ability to pay though. I've never heard of a means-tested sales tax, it's not practical. You can exclude basics, in the UK our VAT which is similar to a sales tax is not applied to most groceries, kids clothing, etc. It's easier to just have an income/property/land/inheritance tax, things that target wealth or income, vs things that target spending. Those with less money tend to spend a higher proportion of their money, so taxing spending targets them.
> The idea that all people have a human right to be free from violent coercion.
And do you think you'd be free of violence in a government free world?
Sure, in the end, all laws are enforced by physical violence - arrest, imprisonment etc - but that just underlines the physical nature of the world - the threat of a man with a gun doesn't go away when you remove collective will.
Almost nobody would respect property rights if there wasn't the implicit threat of a man with a gun either, so the stuff would all get taken by someone else anyway.
Either way, my point isn't that the
consensus is unchallengeable. My point is that it's exactly the same consensus that makes "property" and "theft" actually things. Without any sort of consensus, "theft" is just a change in who's using an object and if you try to stop them you're the one initiating force. Quite a lot of people wouldn't willingly refrain from driving your car.
From a practical standpoint, there is no difference though. Without government, different strongmen will come and take your stuff, and maybe your life. There’s no free lunch.
“Rights” are a mental abstraction. The only real rights you have are the ones you can defend with force.
>> Almost nobody would respect property rights if there wasn't the implicit threat of a man with a gun either, so the stuff would all get taken by someone else anyway.
> Negative rights versus positive rights, this is an old and well-documented dichotomy.
You can go on about "negative rights" all you want, but they're meaningless unless there's "a man with a gun" making sure they're respected. You may say that, you'll be that guy with the gun, but then what happens when there are more bandits than you can handle? Try to solve that problem, and pretty soon you've invented government with taxes and everything. Refuse to solve that problem, and you're a serf to some bandit lord.
The libertarian dream is like an unstable element that has a half-life of a microsecond. Sure, maybe you can imagine conditions for its existence and people can (and do) write books about how it would work under those conditions. However, that's all moot because those conditions are unstable and it will quickly decay into something else.
Philosophically, if those services deteriorate beyond repair and are riff with corruption/nepotism, the people have the right to object, by any means necessary. The efficiency of our tax dollars, in the US at least, is prob very low. I wonder for every $1 of tax revenue collected, how much of that is used for actual public good. 20%?
> Philosophically, if those services deteriorate beyond repair and are riff with corruption/nepotism, the people have the right to object, by any means necessary.
Is that a taxation problem or a corruption problem?
Excessive capital in the hands of centralized government breeds corruption. They get to send $100s of millions, sometimes billions, to corporations and foreign nations. This leads to bribery and kickbacks. The US has people in government who are worth $100s of millions of dollars off salaries that would be entry level in Silicon Valley.
Which is illegal in most countries. Police the illegality (you probably need a well funded police force for that) and the corruption will reduce significantly.
It’s true that not all corruption can be stopped. But if you think privatising everything will make your dollars more efficient then you’re living in a fantasy world.
Look at the mess that is the US healthcare system for a start: twice as expensive as every other country’s healthcare system and certainly not the best
> Police the illegality (you probably need a well funded police force for that) and the corruption will reduce significantly.
How do you bootstrap non-corrupt police/prosecutors/judges/legislators to fight corruption, and how do you prevent the corrupt system from corrupting those people as well? If fighting corruption is so straight forward as merely giving money to police and telling them to enforce laws, then why do most countries around the world fail at it? Surely it's not for want of somebody having the idea to simply enforce anti-corruption laws. The idea is easy, but the idea is not the solution itself.
The US does have many rich people in government, but it's not accurate to suggest that they got rich by being part of the government. Rather, the cost of running electoral campaigns is so high that it selects for people who are already rich from private enterprise (with highly variable degrees of legitimacy). You are putting the cart before the horse, although it is also true that members of Congress are largely exempted from insider trading rules and thus some of them further exploit their position (vs handing their wealth over to a trust administered by some neutral third party).
> The US has people in government who are worth $100s of millions of dollars off salaries that would be entry level in Silicon Valley.
That's a good argument to pay them more. If we paid politicians nothing the only people that would be politicians would be those wealthy enough to pursue it as a hobby
That seems like an implementation issue rather than a philosophical issue? Tax could be spent with high efficiency, and is in other countries with less bureaucracy and corruption. I wouldn't throw out the idea of income tax because the US happens to have a poor system. The same could be said for democracy, the US having a fairly poor implementation, but no one is seriously suggesting the US stop being a democracy.
I'd prefer to defund the federal government and focus on local/regional systems. I'm much more likely to support my neighbor and local communities over putting 20-30% of my income to be divided up in Washington, 1000s of miles away.
The emotional attachment you're talking about is certainly true. This is why supposedly systems of government work best around ~8m citizens. Perhaps a local income tax would work better? Property/land taxes can also be locally administered and skew towards those who can afford it rather than those who can't.
No, we had far less per capita. Medical services are far more commonly used now than in 1913, partially because we have a lot more of them that are actually useful.
Roads were paid either by taxes, or by forced labour, schools were paid for by church tithes[1] or were only available for the rich, but I'll give you hospitals.
They outlawed slavery in 1865. Theres about 48 years between these two things.
Many states raised income via property taxes which also included taxes on slaves.
I don't think it is unreasonable to suggest slavery subsidized not having an income tax.
And they were all total garbage. Roads were a mess, sometimes paid for by private individuals to suit their own interests. Rich people had better quality roads than poor people, but travel was terrible basically everywhere. Roads were also sometimes built and maintained by the use of slaves and forced labor (corvée) where local courts just ordered people to start digging while letting rich people buy their way out of their obligation, while poor people were stuck serving out their time.
Policing often depended partly on volunteers, while once again, rich people routinely hired private police/security/slave patrols and poor people got little protection comparatively.
Garbage collection was just people dumping their shit wherever they felt like it, including into water supplies.
Taxes gave us organized systems and standards that meant that services like roads and policing and trash collection were more consistent and a little less dependent on how much money you had. Things are so much better now thanks to taxes that I can't imagine anyone wanting to go back to how things were before them.
I believe things are so much better now thanks to technological and social improvements which are orthogonal to, and not caused by, taxation. Your argument seems to be like the pirates and global warming one; correlation is not causation.
A steelman argument might be that tax-funded schools and mandated public education caused these things, but ultimately the root cause there would be greater access to education, not the taxes used to fund them. Improving educational outcomes is not dependent on taxes; we use laws to force people to buy automobile insurance and the same could be done with children’s education without the state in the payment loop. Indeed, private schools are routinely better for educational outcomes than the ones funded by taxes.
By this logic (that taxation is the basis for the progress in society) one should see greater technological and social advances and quality of life with increased taxation and more centralized standardization, but we don’t. Instead we got a forever drone war and the military-industrial complex.
For every GPS or space shuttle or NIST, there is also an Iraq or Vietnam or Afghanistan.
It doesn't matter how advanced police cars and police training have become over the years if poor people don't have access to their protection. Without taxes, the poor would still get nothing and the rich would still get as much technologically advanced protection as they can afford. Schools have computers today, but even if they'd had chromebooks in the early 1900s, schools would still have been for the elite and the poor would still have been mostly uneducated.
Increased taxation absolutely leads to greater technological and social advances and quality of life but only to the extent that those taxes are spent well and only up to a certain point. There's a point of diminishing returns for everything after all.
The nice thing about taxes is that we're supposed to be able to have some say in how they're spent, in order to make sure that spending is reasonable. It's a failure of our democracy that we don't have a better handle on massive wastes of spending (like Vietnam or Afghanistan), but not a failure of the very concept of taxation. Taxes are amazing, but the lack of oversight, transparency, and accountability is a real problem. Thankfully it's also one we have the power to fix (and if we don't, we'll need to accept that we have a very different form of government than we tell ourselves we've got)
Even with perfect control over allocation, I still disagree with the philosophical concept of taxation because it is done nonconsensually under threat of force.
There is no use of tax money that justifies institutionalized armed robbery, it is morally indefensible to violate consent using the threat of violence.
You could tax everyone only $1 and use it exclusively for neonatal care and it would still be morally repugnant.
If taxes truly represent the will of the people, and people truly believe they are good, they would pay them even if not placed at gunpoint.
“There is no worse tyranny than to force a man to buy something he does not want simply because you think it would be good for him.” —Heinlein
It seems to me that most of your arguments bring up wealth inequality. At that point, why bother with income taxes? Wouldn’t a simple wealth tax on assets over some threshold address the inequality more directly? If wealth redistribution is the goal, why should non-wealthy people pay any taxes?
I'd argue that collectively we do consent to taxation because we want the massive benefits it gets us.
Naturally not everyone in the country agrees with the vast majority of the people, but those that don't still reap the benefits and are free to try to come up with equal or better alternatives or to convince the rest of the nation to give up interstate highways, public schools, police protection for everybody, or publicly funded science.
If folks like you who don't want taxes ever manages to come up with something better I, and every one else, will be more than happy to keep all of our money to ourselves and still enjoy all of the benefits we get from taxation today. Until then, you've got a hard sell.
I just wish that there were places still unclaimed by any government where people who wanted no part in our tax funded society could go to fend for themselves as truly free people. I'd love to see what you guys manage to come up with. There's lots of room in space, but we'll probably need a lot more time and tax money to get there.
People still want roads and hospitals and schools, and the same money used to fund them today will be available to the same people consuming the services. Imagine how much more good people could do in their own communities if you stopped stripping a fifth of their paychecks to pay for foreign wars?
The difference is competition. There is no incentive whatsoever to do a good job or be efficient if there is no change in your funding for failure. There’s no reason to spend efficiently if it’s not your money.
It seems silly to me to force a common pool to pay for schools but not clothing, for health care but not food. Why not just raise taxes and get rid of checkouts at the grocery store?
Consumer choice is important. Critically so. If you centralize everything, it will invariably suck as much as possible.
I think we've seen enough free market failures that it makes us uneasy about that as a solution, but it can always be argued that nothing we've ever had in this country counts as a "real" free market because, at least at the federal level, we've always been taxed and tariffed with subsidies and loans and free money awarded to various businesses along with regulations and legal constraints.
I'd love to see what happens to a society that has to depend on the free market to provide quality services fairly, but I'm unwilling to give up what we have to experiment on ourselves without even one example of it working elsewhere.
> It seems silly to me to force a common pool to pay for schools but not clothing, for health care but not food. Why not just raise taxes and get rid of checkouts at the grocery store?
Taxes do pay for food and clothes, but only to a minimum in the form of public aid. You can get food stamps and even reimbursement for nice clothes for a job interview. That's a lot of what taxation does for us. It allows us to set a minimum standard for what Americans are entitled to as a citizen of a great country. Every last American citizen can get food, clothes, and an education no matter how much money they have. The more money you have the better those things are, but there's a baseline for everybody. Spreading the costs of those things over the entire wealthy population makes it extremely affordable, in fact it would cost us more if we didn't pay for them. That's also the argument for public healthcare. We're wasting money and having worse outcomes than other countries. Paying a lot more than others and getting a lot less in return is a very common problem in this country.
The idea that only people who want to send their kids to schools should ever pay for them sounds nice, but it would mean fewer kids getting an education and we all benefit when we're not surrounded by total idiots. Things are bad enough in that respect as it is. The average American adult's compitiency in math/science tops out at the 5th grade level! We can't afford to have more ignorance if we want to be competitive.
Nobody needs an inventive to avoid wasting money, because we all have things we'd rather be spending our money on and public money is no exception. We're fully incentivized to do good work because we want good results. We don't want to spend tax money on bridges that collapse or space satellites that explode or fail to transmit data back to Earth.
I fully agree that consumer choice is very important, and I wish we were much more aggressive about fighting against anti-competitive behavior and monopolies (actual or de facto). That said, some things are better left to the government alone. I certainly don't want 15 private toll roads running past my house. Other things like the postal service or internet service are so important that the government should be allowed to provide them even when/where it would never profitable to do so. They can fill in where private companies who care only about money never would.
I don’t know how much stock I’d put in roads before the automobile was popularized, however the transcontinental railroad, the most impressive piece of transportation infrastructure in the world at the time, was built without Federal income taxes.
When I moved from a country with public, so called “free” healthcare (Sweden) to one with private health care (CH) where I’m a customer rather than a “user”, I was blown away. I can see a doctor tomorrow, I can select which language (maybe higher chance to find a Swedish-speaking doctor here ngl), there are not the crazy bureaucracy and endless hours waiting in a phone queue, and I’m welcomed to my doctors office with a cup of coffee. Being a customer rather than a nuisance is great! It’s like upgrading from waiting in line for a Trabant to getting a Volvo! My health insurance here is also cheaper than the one I paid in Sweden (technically tax to the Region/Län).
Most of the payment for healthcare (in the US) comes from insurance companies and government health coverage. It's no surprise that the providers pay more attention to those agencies than the patients.
If you want to be treated as a customer, you can use one of the concierge services, although paying for that in addition to insurance would make me feel like a sucker, too.
Isn’t this whole thing about Americans health insurance being tied to their jobs a side effect of some crazy WW2 regulation? Not sure how it works over there
Let's not call the Swiss healthcare "private" or the US Americans will get the wrong impression. Yes it's offered by private companies but here is where the "private" stops - it's mandatory for starters, no free market as the very strict rules they must follow are written in law, primes and services are also controlled by the state... As for the experience, without knowing the Swedish system I can tell that the phone queues we have them too (depending on which provider you got, you might get usable online support), and the family doctor can be an ass just as well.
In CH I can go to a different doctor if I don’t like one. They run their own businesses. It’s their incentive to take me. It’s amazing!!! Totally normal to everyone from here.
I just go on OneDoc and select one according to my preferences. Unbelievable!! I use CSS in Wallis and I can email and call them and get a reply very fast. I have the direct phone number of my guy at the insurance office. Maybe a perk of village living. To them I’m a client rather than an annoyance, unlike with Försäkringskassan in SE.
If I wasn’t satisfied, I could select another one. Not quite possible in a socialist health care system.
Health care in CH is still public, even if most actors are private companies. The baseline cost are shared socially. That's why the premiums increase every year.
It’s not any more public than in America. Individuals pay their own health insurance premiums. Individuals who don’t have enough money can receive a subsidy from the canton: https://www.ch.ch/en/health/health-insurance/health-insuranc.... That’s exactly how Obamacare works. The cap at which the subsidy kicks in is almost the same, too: 8% of income in CH, 8.5% under Obamacare.
And on top of that the US has a fully publicly funded system, Medicaid.
Thank you for beating me to the punch regarding the Swiss system vis-a-vis the US post-Obamacare. The mental gymnastics that people (not just here, but on Reddit and online in general) resort to to maintain their presupposition that the US system is completely unique (and thus "capitalist"/"not socialist") compared to the rest of the world get very tiresome.
A huge contributor to the confusion in US discussion of the issue comes from the fact that the two countries we are closest to, Canada and UK, both have free-at-use systems. Too many Americans think that all other developed countries' systems are "100% free" and "just like the NHS", when they are arguably more the aberration when compared to DACH's sickness funds, France's 30% copays, and the Australian system that really, really, really encourages going private. This creates a weird feedback loop in which residents of other countries, in turn, get confused about their own systems when compared to the US's.
The insurance is private, the healthcare providers are private. Health insurance is mandatory. That pretty much describes Obamacare, except the Swiss will sue you for not having the mandatory health insurance.
I mean, there's still a difference. The profit motive is now fully normalized in US healthcare. At this moment, just about every single hospital in the US is understaffed to the point of patient endangerment / harm. And nobody can do anything about it, because it is the entire industry, and our society has accepted that maximized profits come before patient care.
“Patient care” is not the ultimate good. It must trade off against other priorities in the society. We cannot dedicate 100% of our resources to patient care.
This means that even public healthcare systems must operate on a budget, the resources are still limited, and in actual practice this means that the public systems are also understaffed, often (if not, in fact, typically) more so than in US.
In my personal experience, wait times and availability of healthcare in public system in Poland are pretty dismal compared to US. I also heard similar opinions from most of my friends and colleagues who immigrated to US from Canada and UK; they universally say that they are actually able to get higher quality service in US with shorter wait times.
You cannot just throw catchphrases about “maximizing profits” and proceed as if it settles the issue, you have to actually argue that some other approach will bring better outcomes, and you need to argue why similar approaches to what you propose applied elsewhere have empirically not brought the outcomes you expect to see in US.
I'm living in Swiss but originally from the Netherlands. What you in CH call phone queues wouldn't even be noticed in other countries in the EU. Waiting lists? Same story. In NL it can take many months or even a year before you can be seen by a specialist. Maybe that specialist needs an X-ray taken? Make another appointment with the radiologist and start waiting again.
Often I get the feeling here that people in CH don't realize how good they have it ..
That's because in the Netherlands everyone is equal. You're treated according to medical needs. Doctors don't care that you are a very important Google developer. They read your chart and know that you can wait. It's battlefield triage in Dutch hospitals. I find it hilarious that people think that they put you on list you for shits and giggles.
You're totally free to find a private clinic in Singapore (but let's face it most people who think they are affluent don't quite have the money for that and Google isn't forking over the money because you're not that important).
>Let's not call the Swiss healthcare "private" or the US Americans will get the wrong impression.
As others have told you, you are wrong. The Swiss system is almost identical to that of the US post-Obamacare, albeit with 100% mandatory enrollment (as in, the local canton picks a plan and sends you the bill) as opposed to the US's system in which a tax penalty is levied.
>no free market as the very strict rules they must follow are written in law, primes and services are also controlled by the state
Just where do you think the prices for plans on the various US states' exchanges come from? Out of thin air? Yes, insurance companies have some leeway, but not as much as you think.
What made me wrong was probably the fact that, although almost identical, for the end-user the two systems couldn't be more different. With all my critics, in Switzerland it quite works, while from the US is hear plenty of horror stories. So either private here is not private there, or I'm biased by what I read here and elsewhere about the US healthcare.
20% of the horror stories you hear are from young people who decided they don't need to sign up for health insurance then get in trouble.
60% (and, really, the 20% above and 20% below too) are from those upset that the US system isn't "free" because, as I wrote elsewhere, all they know of to compare with are the "free" UK and Canadian systems, so the whole world outside the US must be "free" and thus anything that isn't 100% "free" is fascism by billionaires, or something. When, really, the UK and Canadian systems are more aberrations than the US's is.
The remaining 20% are more like complaints about how different plans cover different things, or finding a doctor that accepts their plan, or unexpected difficulties with changing plans; that is, procedural issues. I don't mean to say that they are insignificant—I'm experiencing the last one myself—but they don't get the Internet mobs riled up as much as they get about the injustice of not having 100% "free" healthcare like "the rest of the world".
You just haven't been paying close enough attention. Our health care system in the US sucks.
Are you going to try to defend the completely fictional numbers that end up on US hospital bills? And how those numbers drive the insurance protection racket? And how they'll say "but nobody pays that", when 1) ABSOLUTELY some people do end up paying full chargemaster rates, and 2) even a small fraction of chargemaster is usually a multiple of the actual cost of providing health care services
And isn't it splendid to be able to force labourers to pay those thing for your convenience, since they have no choice but to work to support themselves?
Whenever someone says "philosophically" I take it as "I simplified the problem so much it no longer has any connection to reality, but at least I reached a firm conclusion".
Nobody owes so much to the system they despise as much as libertarians.
Economies almost never regret putting money on the pockets of the poorest people (TBH, I'm having a hard time justifying that "almost" up there, but there must be an exception somewhere). As a rule, South America has a corruption problem. Not exactly a "government spends too much" one. And Argentina is clearly not an exception to that rule.
But yeah, all else being equal, that's prone to create even more inflation. If it will also improve people's life enough to be a positive is up to be seen.
its normal now, everybody knows how to work with it - buy with credit payable in 6/12 months, take advantage of government credit to offset it (often such credits are below inflation)
Also buy street dollar (blue) with whatever you manage to save, etc - to sell it later to preserve value
At this point after many decades of inflation every argentinian is a hobbyist economist himself (otherwise you couldn’t make it month to month)
There needs to be a livable part of the planet which isn't a country and never can be but individuals and expelled people can go there. No military or aid interference of any kind, no taxes or laws but also no import/export commerce, communication or organizing of any government or militia/military will be allowed. Imagine the wild west but wilder and more "mad max". Patagonia or parts of australia or andes would be nice.
The governments that establish the land (world countries' govs) will be enforcers monitoring from outside in to enforce the rules (not laws because violation is summary execution).
> No military or aid interference of any kind, no taxes or laws but also no import/export commerce, communication or organizing of any government or militia/military will be allowed
Everyone else is going to spontaneously force rules onto others? And how exactly do you see that working when the party breaking some rule resists?
It's exactly this kind of magical thinking that has resulted in essentially no state-equivalent anarchist societies actually managing to function and exist in modern times, the few that pop up get slammed down by states, because they really suck at resisting. The closest you seem to get are situations like the Zapatistas that are libsoc, not anarchist, since they still have a state.
> And how exactly do you see that working when the party breaking some rule resists?
They get killed/droned. Have you seen Escape from NY/LA? This would be like the modern australia except people can volunteer to go there and we have the tech and resources to enforce a perimeter and monitor the goings in the place.
Anarchism really isn't the goal. It is to have the equivalent of the old west where while it is brutal and you don't enjoy rights and benefits of civilization, you also get to live a life, however short, that is truly yours. Anyone cal flee global persecution and go there. Snowden could have for example. The place itself is considered the equivalent of dying to society once you enter it and you can never come out of it. Whether technology, disease, ideology or something else, this would be the redundancy, a controlled environment that is immune to the changes of the outside global world. A place for those who have no place anywhere else. A place criminals can volunteer to go to for certain crimes (especially victimless ones) instead of spend their lives in a cage. Where deserters from war and those who abandon their lives can go to, at the risk of their safety and with no guarantees of wellbeing other than that which they could fight for. It would be more mad max than somalia.
Multi-national/Global treaty, they become military target practice if they arm themselves or try to import/export by whoever is available or wants to train their soldiers.
What happens there will be outside the purview of outside socities, it would become a land where safety and security is guaranteed by strength alone. Like you said? There will be warlords but they can't import arms but there will also be masses with rocks and sticks, nature abhors power so whatever power you align yourself with keeps you as safe as they can and punishes abhorrent actions and violate rights of those who are weaker. For some it will be utopia, for many it will be a nightmarish punishment where you are exiled to because of crimes you committed. Sort of like escape from LA/NY.
Countercounterpoint: this is cheaper and potentially more humane than prison and giving your military stuff to do at times of peace is a problem that is helped by this.
I've dreamed of creating such a place of libertarians to live. I'd call it Galt's Gulch and everything will be controlled by a single for-profit corporation unrestrained by any government oversight. If you don't work, you'll starve, as you should. If any of the residents don't like it, they can live (or more accurately, starve) in a small, barren yard surrounded by a wall whose inside surface will be covered with "no trespassing" signs. It's all be fine, because everyone has a choice to voluntarily consent (or not and starve).
The child doesn't have an original country. There is no record of them being born or who their parents are because there is no government. There is no communication with the outside so records can't be held externally.
To be clear I think you're describing a horrific dystopia that should be opposed by any ethical human being.
With no government, laws, taxes, milizia, etc, who is going to enforce the rules against the their establishment? In practical term, how do you prevent the local warlord from taking over and enslaving the local population?
Keep in mind that in reality it raises the floor to 1900 dollars/ month for workers only. Thats at today’s black market exchange rate (article cites non existent official rate).
With the rapid inflation we are experiencing (likely going hyper) that floor will get back to normal soon.
Argentinian here. Article has some flaws that could cause a different perception of the situation:
- The income tax isn't really "eliminated", that's not right, it just has a higher starting point and is now indexed to the monthly wage. Otherwise it required yearly updates that were quite messy. It starts to apply to gross salaries above 15x the minimum monthly wage (the starting point used to be WAY lower).
- 1.7 million pesos isn't really 5k USD, as no one has access to that exchange rate. It's more like 1800~2000 USD monthly.
Overall I think it's a good measure, but it still doesn't tackle the elephant(s) in the room: Having >40% poverty, having an unrealistic exchange rate, low minimum wage, informal economy and workers, problems renting/buying real-state, unsatisfactory education results...
Is an "electionist" meassure by the current president Sergio Massa (he is not officially president, but he is acting like one for more than a year) who is running for president.
I am guessing that the reasoning is with less income tax revenue for the government, they will need to create more money to pay the bills. The only way to prevent this would be to reduce the spending the same amount as the reduction in tax revenue.
Are you going to acknowledge the point, or just move what we're talking about? You asked why that would lead to money printing, which I answered, then you jumped to something else.
Sigh... I hereby acknowledge officially to the Hacker News poster known as Tullius Cicero, that I understood the explanation being given as to why some are of the opinion that decreased government income from labour taxation would give the same government reason to borrow more money for their budget, casually referred to as "printing money".
Edit: People who are down voting could for example explain why it is acceptable to tax the labour of another human being, but not acceptable for the government to run a deficit or devalue the currency ... or default. Taxes on labour are a form of serfdom, one of the worst evils of humanity. Maybe acceptable when you have a cushy and high paid office job, but a satanic burden for those who are stuck in the hell of heavy and stressful labour for their survival.
Venezuelan in Argentina here. I also agree with everything.
Massa knows he'll lose the election. This is a measure to destroy the economy even further, so the next government gets delivered a mess. Massa is playing a longer game here as he aims to get elected not this time, but in years later in a Messianic way ("I told you so" victory).
If Bullrich wins, she'll not be competent enough to fix the mess. If Milei wins, he'll appear as tyrant when new economic measures are put in place.
I'm not defending either side, I'm just providing my experienced viewpoint in populism.
Populism is the end result of all democracies, as the populace gets complacent, then ignorant, while being sold dreams of wanton entitlement.
Sad to the situation in Venezuela and Argentina. Maddening, that with such modern examples, everywhere else still thinks 'it won't happen here because we're <insert something condescending>'.
After Mao the Chinese literally had to find 80 year old retired professors living in remote mountain villages to start teaching at university.
The first graduates had to teach the next class.
The statement is a hyperbole that does not reflect the complexity and diversity of the historical reality. The Cultural Revolution had a devastating impact on education in China, but it did not completely destroy it or make it impossible to rebuild.
Some retired professors were recalled to resume teaching after the end of the Cultural Revolution, but they were not necessarily 80 years old or living in remote mountain villages. Moreover, they were not the only source of qualified teachers, as some younger academics who survived the political turmoil also returned to their posts or were promoted. Furthermore, the first graduates after the reopening of universities did not have to teach the next class, as there were still entrance exams and admission quotas to select the best candidates. The government also implemented various policies and reforms to restore and improve the education system, such as expanding enrollment, increasing funding, diversifying curricula, and promoting scientific research.
El problema del salario digno va muy atado a la productividad.
El de la economía informal... es que os machacan a impuestos e inflación... es bárbaro lo que estáis pasando, y, en mi opinión, cómo os han tratado los políticos.
Mucha suerte y que salgáis lo más pronto posible de todo esto. Un saludo cordial.
It's also important to mention that given that the projected inflation for 2024 is above 200% and historically this taxes are not properly annually updated, the most probable scenario is that in a year or a few months most people that were benefited are going to pay income taxes again. So this are just populist measures to get some votes for the incoming elections (also mostly forced by the liberal party that is leading the polls), but won't last much.
Taxes on goods and services, esp. the VAT; personal income tax on high earners (despite the article's title); social security contributions; and corporate income taxes will be the main ones (not necessarily in that order).
I can't speak to the economic side of this, but intuitively, the idea that one required to sell their labor to survive must pay taxes on that, has always rubbed me the wrong way.
Interestingly enough, the DPRK ("North Korea") outlawed income taxes in 1974, calling them "remnants of an antiquated society."
Society needs far less money to function than is captured by taxes. There are US states without an income tax - the majority of government spending that is relevant to an individual is provided the state government in the US.
Yes, I live in one of them, Washington state. But your reasoning here is highly flawed:
1. Even within Washington, much of society's necessities are paid for by the federal government, which DOES use income taxes.
2. Instead of using income taxes, Washington simply relies on other taxes. Not having income taxes doesn't automatically mean the tax burden is lower.
3. Because it relies on other taxes, the state's overall tax burden is highly regressive*, with poorer people paying proportionately more of their income than richer people. This is great for me, a SWE, but it's a lot less great for poor and working class folks.
* The lowest income quintile pays 17.8% of income to state and local taxes, whereas the top 1% of income earners pay only 3% to state and local taxes - https://itep.org/whopays/washington/
The trouble with income tax is that every transaction along that path (manufacturing, transportation, employment) is already taxed, as is consumption (sales).
Income is easier to calculate, but wouldn't "total net worth" be more fair? An ultra rich person might show no income for a year and pay no taxes, because they lost a small fraction of their wealth, whereas an ultra poor person who has a lucky year and makes the median income once will be taxed even though keeping extra cash in their pocket would probably be the best possible use for the money.
It's interesting that the article doesn't mention Javier Milei - maybe the intention from the Minister/Candidate was showing up as a someone who is economic liberal to counter his surging in the polls
There is an interesting and economically well-motivated argument that income tax should be eliminated everywhere.
The argument agrees (as do I) that it is right for the government to collect taxes, and that many individuals (including myself) should pay taxes; believe me, I like having a stable society!! -- but "income" is not a good basis.
It comes down to two things: ownership and also what government should encourage (taxes are a way of "discouraging" things by adding an additional cost).
Labor. I and only I own my labor, else I am a slave. On what basis does the government have rights to the fruits of this? Why discourage me from employing my labor to the benefit of my countrymen?
Capital. If I deploy my capital, hopefully to make other's labor more efficient, I am taking the risk. Why should the government also charge me for this? Why discourage me from investing?
Land. Ahhh, here we have something. My ownership of my land is a right granted by the government (unlike my ownership of my labor). And land is only (economically) good for rent-seeking, which is economically harmful.
Taxes on land could fully fund the government, provide the wealth redistribution which is necessary to keep capitalist economies functioning for more than a few generations, and aligns with the foundational principles of democratic governments (natural law, rights of man vs government, etc).
I have been following Argentina for the las three years. I am spanish.
This and a recent tax decrease have been forced by the fact that Milei has a strong first position as a candidate.Otherwise it would have never happened. It is all acting.
Take in mind this is only for employees, independent workers that sell services earning more than $8M pesos (about $8700), or $11.3M for goods ($12300) will still have to pay the standard 35% rate.
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[ 1.8 ms ] story [ 288 ms ] threadDepends on the country but normally your success benefitted from things like your and your employees's education, police, infrastructure etc.
Taxes are a way to pay back. The amount is debatable not the existence as such.
The whole point of centralised laws is it's much more efficient than negotiating with everyone you meet as to whether they will k!ll you and/or take or stuff or not.
The scale of interactions in modern societies requires simplification of the management of those interactions - laws and enforcement of - what's allow or not is decided once, not every interaction.
BTW without governments opayed through taxes things like officious intermedler doctrine wouldn't exist instead you get the good old nice-place-you-got-there-be-a-shame-if-anything-happened-to-it doctrine.
Nice place you got here. Be a shame if anything happened to it
So he is saying he hasn't asked for the government services but is been forced to pay for them. The obvious answer is that by being a member of society you have implicitly agreed to it's rules - you can't pick and choose.
https://www.law.cornell.edu/wex/officious_intermeddler
That's such nonsense though, since as an individual you have virtually no impact on anything unless you were born into extreme wealth. No government that I'm aware of operates hypothecation (where you can specify what your taxes get used for), and voting for representatives based on policy commitments is crude, unreliable, and too slow to be adequately responsive. Nobody in the private sector has a job where they are only subject to performance review every 2/4/6 years.
In the US, few people truly support the roughly $1 trillion annual cost of 'defense' and nobody thinks it's efficiently allocated, but any proposals to significantly cut that sum are political suicide so it's never going to happen. Much of our current political angst stems from people's intuitive awareness that their taxes are a real fact of life whereas their influence on the political process is largely notional.
I'd argue that the democratic ties between the people and the actions of the government in the US are extremely fragile - money is more important than people now in the US electoral system.
Another American disease is to then extrapolate that malaise and assume the rest of the world is in a similar position.
The solution isn't to dissolve society - that removes the only mechanism ( government ) that the majority have to control the powerful, further entrenching the power of the rich.
The solution is to take money out of US politics and get it working again for the majority,
Imagine without asking you someone cleaned your car ,while you were shopping, and then demanded payment.
They're comparing the services provided by taxes to this.
It is silly. None of us consented to our parents / guardians raising us.. but for better or worse they did.
The real world tends not to be full of absolutes. It's unhelpfully reductive to go from "property is a right" to "taxation is theft".
And the above is a trade-off, the state polices & punishes murder and theft etc, with an aim of reducing it overall - so you are less likely to be murdered or stolen from.
Then this central mechanism needs paying for. Tax is simply a way of paying for it - and it's not voluntary to stop free-riders.
The reality is you need government & laws when people start living in complex societies where people are no longer self-sufficient, but rely on a complex web of interactions.
Laws are there to arbitrate between people - if you live on a homestead in the mountains they may seem unnecessary - if you live in a big city, where even essentials like food and water depend on a complex web of interactions - they are essential.
Property exists even in stateless societies
If it's a "buy-in" to a system people should have a way to "buy out" as well, which of course doesn't happen, because there never was any "buy-in", it was "pay us your wages or we'll hunt you down". Slaves could buy their own freedom in Rome and other places, so why can't "free" people under taxation?
Property rights should rank far lower than human rights. So if you want to collect taxes, go after property instead of after people. But it is the property owning class who runs the two-sided coin of capitalism/socialism, so good luck on that.
To me it's like similar to full communism, both of them mean well but in practice don't work well.
If you get more out of a system than someone else you should be probably willing or want too contribute more to it's upkeep.
I think they also don't know how long the history of taxation really is. Taxation is pretty much as old as civilization itself.
Extreme libertarianism, which is seriously flawed, but people still fall for it (out of greed and/or seduction by an oversimple toy model that can't actually work in practice).
You may believe that a violation of people’s natural rights to own things and be free from violent coercion is justified in service of building a central government, but it is still a human rights violation.
Surely all it is, is something most people agree on.
Take ownership of land for example - doesn't really make sense - at some point it wasn't 'owned' then somebody declared they owned it and could pass that right on in perpetuity.
Such a construct doesn't exist outside a system of laws ( created from an agreement from the majority of people ) - it's not some magic 'natural right'.
Again there is no 'natural right' - just something most people agree makes sense.
The idea of rights was a tool to try to get wide agreement ( internationally ) on the basics that most people agree on whatever culture. It's a useful tool - but to imbue some sort of existence outside society is an attempt at a Jedi mind trick.
Almost nobody would pay taxes if there weren’t the implicit threat of a man with a gun.
And do you think you'd be free of violence in a government free world?
Sure, in the end, all laws are enforced by physical violence - arrest, imprisonment etc - but that just underlines the physical nature of the world - the threat of a man with a gun doesn't go away when you remove collective will.
Positive rights are a fiction to euphemize theft and slavery. From a purely logical standpoint, negative rights can be the only true rights.
We have that consensus, and relatively efficient enforcement of it, it just happens to disagree with you on what stuff's inalienably yours.
They don’t, and they wouldn’t, because we do not have that consensus.
Either way, my point isn't that the consensus is unchallengeable. My point is that it's exactly the same consensus that makes "property" and "theft" actually things. Without any sort of consensus, "theft" is just a change in who's using an object and if you try to stop them you're the one initiating force. Quite a lot of people wouldn't willingly refrain from driving your car.
“Rights” are a mental abstraction. The only real rights you have are the ones you can defend with force.
> Negative rights versus positive rights, this is an old and well-documented dichotomy.
You can go on about "negative rights" all you want, but they're meaningless unless there's "a man with a gun" making sure they're respected. You may say that, you'll be that guy with the gun, but then what happens when there are more bandits than you can handle? Try to solve that problem, and pretty soon you've invented government with taxes and everything. Refuse to solve that problem, and you're a serf to some bandit lord.
The libertarian dream is like an unstable element that has a half-life of a microsecond. Sure, maybe you can imagine conditions for its existence and people can (and do) write books about how it would work under those conditions. However, that's all moot because those conditions are unstable and it will quickly decay into something else.
Is that a taxation problem or a corruption problem?
Fix the corruption first.
Which is illegal in most countries. Police the illegality (you probably need a well funded police force for that) and the corruption will reduce significantly.
It’s true that not all corruption can be stopped. But if you think privatising everything will make your dollars more efficient then you’re living in a fantasy world. Look at the mess that is the US healthcare system for a start: twice as expensive as every other country’s healthcare system and certainly not the best
How do you bootstrap non-corrupt police/prosecutors/judges/legislators to fight corruption, and how do you prevent the corrupt system from corrupting those people as well? If fighting corruption is so straight forward as merely giving money to police and telling them to enforce laws, then why do most countries around the world fail at it? Surely it's not for want of somebody having the idea to simply enforce anti-corruption laws. The idea is easy, but the idea is not the solution itself.
And I do mean most. Look at this map: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Corruption_Perceptions_Index#/...
Several of the countries colored green on that map are generally acknowledged to be pretty damn corrupt, yet most are even worse.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_current_members_of_the...
That's a good argument to pay them more. If we paid politicians nothing the only people that would be politicians would be those wealthy enough to pursue it as a hobby
The system scales with the same people doing the same work for the same money, with or without taxes.
Roads, schools, and hospitals existed before taxes, and they will exist after them.
[1] AKA taxes.
I don't think it is unreasonable to suggest slavery subsidized not having an income tax.
Policing often depended partly on volunteers, while once again, rich people routinely hired private police/security/slave patrols and poor people got little protection comparatively.
Garbage collection was just people dumping their shit wherever they felt like it, including into water supplies.
All the same problems with schools too. Schools were for the rich or the religious, and even when the country saw a need for public schools they were a huge mess. (https://ushistoryscene.com/article/rise-of-public-education/)
Taxes gave us organized systems and standards that meant that services like roads and policing and trash collection were more consistent and a little less dependent on how much money you had. Things are so much better now thanks to taxes that I can't imagine anyone wanting to go back to how things were before them.
A steelman argument might be that tax-funded schools and mandated public education caused these things, but ultimately the root cause there would be greater access to education, not the taxes used to fund them. Improving educational outcomes is not dependent on taxes; we use laws to force people to buy automobile insurance and the same could be done with children’s education without the state in the payment loop. Indeed, private schools are routinely better for educational outcomes than the ones funded by taxes.
By this logic (that taxation is the basis for the progress in society) one should see greater technological and social advances and quality of life with increased taxation and more centralized standardization, but we don’t. Instead we got a forever drone war and the military-industrial complex.
For every GPS or space shuttle or NIST, there is also an Iraq or Vietnam or Afghanistan.
Increased taxation absolutely leads to greater technological and social advances and quality of life but only to the extent that those taxes are spent well and only up to a certain point. There's a point of diminishing returns for everything after all.
The nice thing about taxes is that we're supposed to be able to have some say in how they're spent, in order to make sure that spending is reasonable. It's a failure of our democracy that we don't have a better handle on massive wastes of spending (like Vietnam or Afghanistan), but not a failure of the very concept of taxation. Taxes are amazing, but the lack of oversight, transparency, and accountability is a real problem. Thankfully it's also one we have the power to fix (and if we don't, we'll need to accept that we have a very different form of government than we tell ourselves we've got)
There is no use of tax money that justifies institutionalized armed robbery, it is morally indefensible to violate consent using the threat of violence.
You could tax everyone only $1 and use it exclusively for neonatal care and it would still be morally repugnant.
If taxes truly represent the will of the people, and people truly believe they are good, they would pay them even if not placed at gunpoint.
“There is no worse tyranny than to force a man to buy something he does not want simply because you think it would be good for him.” —Heinlein
It seems to me that most of your arguments bring up wealth inequality. At that point, why bother with income taxes? Wouldn’t a simple wealth tax on assets over some threshold address the inequality more directly? If wealth redistribution is the goal, why should non-wealthy people pay any taxes?
I have to hand it too you for at least admitting your views there.
>If taxes truly represent the will of the people, and people truly believe they are good, they would pay them even if not placed at gunpoint.
People aren't like that though. If they were , we wouldn't have car clamps.
I don't think you can argue a tax paying for neonatal care is repugnant and at that same time argue people will pay for what is good.
Naturally not everyone in the country agrees with the vast majority of the people, but those that don't still reap the benefits and are free to try to come up with equal or better alternatives or to convince the rest of the nation to give up interstate highways, public schools, police protection for everybody, or publicly funded science.
If folks like you who don't want taxes ever manages to come up with something better I, and every one else, will be more than happy to keep all of our money to ourselves and still enjoy all of the benefits we get from taxation today. Until then, you've got a hard sell.
I just wish that there were places still unclaimed by any government where people who wanted no part in our tax funded society could go to fend for themselves as truly free people. I'd love to see what you guys manage to come up with. There's lots of room in space, but we'll probably need a lot more time and tax money to get there.
People still want roads and hospitals and schools, and the same money used to fund them today will be available to the same people consuming the services. Imagine how much more good people could do in their own communities if you stopped stripping a fifth of their paychecks to pay for foreign wars?
The difference is competition. There is no incentive whatsoever to do a good job or be efficient if there is no change in your funding for failure. There’s no reason to spend efficiently if it’s not your money.
It seems silly to me to force a common pool to pay for schools but not clothing, for health care but not food. Why not just raise taxes and get rid of checkouts at the grocery store?
Consumer choice is important. Critically so. If you centralize everything, it will invariably suck as much as possible.
What's stopping you doing good now?
I'd love to see what happens to a society that has to depend on the free market to provide quality services fairly, but I'm unwilling to give up what we have to experiment on ourselves without even one example of it working elsewhere.
> It seems silly to me to force a common pool to pay for schools but not clothing, for health care but not food. Why not just raise taxes and get rid of checkouts at the grocery store?
Taxes do pay for food and clothes, but only to a minimum in the form of public aid. You can get food stamps and even reimbursement for nice clothes for a job interview. That's a lot of what taxation does for us. It allows us to set a minimum standard for what Americans are entitled to as a citizen of a great country. Every last American citizen can get food, clothes, and an education no matter how much money they have. The more money you have the better those things are, but there's a baseline for everybody. Spreading the costs of those things over the entire wealthy population makes it extremely affordable, in fact it would cost us more if we didn't pay for them. That's also the argument for public healthcare. We're wasting money and having worse outcomes than other countries. Paying a lot more than others and getting a lot less in return is a very common problem in this country.
The idea that only people who want to send their kids to schools should ever pay for them sounds nice, but it would mean fewer kids getting an education and we all benefit when we're not surrounded by total idiots. Things are bad enough in that respect as it is. The average American adult's compitiency in math/science tops out at the 5th grade level! We can't afford to have more ignorance if we want to be competitive.
Nobody needs an inventive to avoid wasting money, because we all have things we'd rather be spending our money on and public money is no exception. We're fully incentivized to do good work because we want good results. We don't want to spend tax money on bridges that collapse or space satellites that explode or fail to transmit data back to Earth.
I fully agree that consumer choice is very important, and I wish we were much more aggressive about fighting against anti-competitive behavior and monopolies (actual or de facto). That said, some things are better left to the government alone. I certainly don't want 15 private toll roads running past my house. Other things like the postal service or internet service are so important that the government should be allowed to provide them even when/where it would never profitable to do so. They can fill in where private companies who care only about money never would.
The USA of course had taxes long before the 16th Amendment.
It’s simple game theory. When you’re the only game in town, you can charge as much as you want, and provide as little service as you wish.
If you want to be treated as a customer, you can use one of the concierge services, although paying for that in addition to insurance would make me feel like a sucker, too.
I just go on OneDoc and select one according to my preferences. Unbelievable!! I use CSS in Wallis and I can email and call them and get a reply very fast. I have the direct phone number of my guy at the insurance office. Maybe a perk of village living. To them I’m a client rather than an annoyance, unlike with Försäkringskassan in SE. If I wasn’t satisfied, I could select another one. Not quite possible in a socialist health care system.
And on top of that the US has a fully publicly funded system, Medicaid.
A huge contributor to the confusion in US discussion of the issue comes from the fact that the two countries we are closest to, Canada and UK, both have free-at-use systems. Too many Americans think that all other developed countries' systems are "100% free" and "just like the NHS", when they are arguably more the aberration when compared to DACH's sickness funds, France's 30% copays, and the Australian system that really, really, really encourages going private. This creates a weird feedback loop in which residents of other countries, in turn, get confused about their own systems when compared to the US's.
This means that even public healthcare systems must operate on a budget, the resources are still limited, and in actual practice this means that the public systems are also understaffed, often (if not, in fact, typically) more so than in US.
In my personal experience, wait times and availability of healthcare in public system in Poland are pretty dismal compared to US. I also heard similar opinions from most of my friends and colleagues who immigrated to US from Canada and UK; they universally say that they are actually able to get higher quality service in US with shorter wait times.
You cannot just throw catchphrases about “maximizing profits” and proceed as if it settles the issue, you have to actually argue that some other approach will bring better outcomes, and you need to argue why similar approaches to what you propose applied elsewhere have empirically not brought the outcomes you expect to see in US.
Often I get the feeling here that people in CH don't realize how good they have it ..
You're totally free to find a private clinic in Singapore (but let's face it most people who think they are affluent don't quite have the money for that and Google isn't forking over the money because you're not that important).
As others have told you, you are wrong. The Swiss system is almost identical to that of the US post-Obamacare, albeit with 100% mandatory enrollment (as in, the local canton picks a plan and sends you the bill) as opposed to the US's system in which a tax penalty is levied.
>no free market as the very strict rules they must follow are written in law, primes and services are also controlled by the state
Just where do you think the prices for plans on the various US states' exchanges come from? Out of thin air? Yes, insurance companies have some leeway, but not as much as you think.
60% (and, really, the 20% above and 20% below too) are from those upset that the US system isn't "free" because, as I wrote elsewhere, all they know of to compare with are the "free" UK and Canadian systems, so the whole world outside the US must be "free" and thus anything that isn't 100% "free" is fascism by billionaires, or something. When, really, the UK and Canadian systems are more aberrations than the US's is.
The remaining 20% are more like complaints about how different plans cover different things, or finding a doctor that accepts their plan, or unexpected difficulties with changing plans; that is, procedural issues. I don't mean to say that they are insignificant—I'm experiencing the last one myself—but they don't get the Internet mobs riled up as much as they get about the injustice of not having 100% "free" healthcare like "the rest of the world".
Are you going to try to defend the completely fictional numbers that end up on US hospital bills? And how those numbers drive the insurance protection racket? And how they'll say "but nobody pays that", when 1) ABSOLUTELY some people do end up paying full chargemaster rates, and 2) even a small fraction of chargemaster is usually a multiple of the actual cost of providing health care services
Nobody owes so much to the system they despise as much as libertarians.
Also apparently Dec 10 a new government takes control so is this just meant to put pressure on them?
They are people. They are not issues.
Economies almost never regret putting money on the pockets of the poorest people (TBH, I'm having a hard time justifying that "almost" up there, but there must be an exception somewhere). As a rule, South America has a corruption problem. Not exactly a "government spends too much" one. And Argentina is clearly not an exception to that rule.
But yeah, all else being equal, that's prone to create even more inflation. If it will also improve people's life enough to be a positive is up to be seen.
Don't read more into this than an attempt at electoral cheap shots
Also buy street dollar (blue) with whatever you manage to save, etc - to sell it later to preserve value
At this point after many decades of inflation every argentinian is a hobbyist economist himself (otherwise you couldn’t make it month to month)
https://www.usdebtclock.org/
> So we'll lower our income
So either public service will be reduced or they get a hefty fee or they create new taxes on other things
Who is going to enforce this?
It's exactly this kind of magical thinking that has resulted in essentially no state-equivalent anarchist societies actually managing to function and exist in modern times, the few that pop up get slammed down by states, because they really suck at resisting. The closest you seem to get are situations like the Zapatistas that are libsoc, not anarchist, since they still have a state.
They get killed/droned. Have you seen Escape from NY/LA? This would be like the modern australia except people can volunteer to go there and we have the tech and resources to enforce a perimeter and monitor the goings in the place.
Anarchism really isn't the goal. It is to have the equivalent of the old west where while it is brutal and you don't enjoy rights and benefits of civilization, you also get to live a life, however short, that is truly yours. Anyone cal flee global persecution and go there. Snowden could have for example. The place itself is considered the equivalent of dying to society once you enter it and you can never come out of it. Whether technology, disease, ideology or something else, this would be the redundancy, a controlled environment that is immune to the changes of the outside global world. A place for those who have no place anywhere else. A place criminals can volunteer to go to for certain crimes (especially victimless ones) instead of spend their lives in a cage. Where deserters from war and those who abandon their lives can go to, at the risk of their safety and with no guarantees of wellbeing other than that which they could fight for. It would be more mad max than somalia.
Sure they can. Who's gonna stop them?
But yes, it'll be a utopia for the warlords and their upper level cronies. A nightmare for common folk, including anyone born there.
To be clear I think you're describing a horrific dystopia that should be opposed by any ethical human being.
With the rapid inflation we are experiencing (likely going hyper) that floor will get back to normal soon.
We’ll se what next president does.
source: I’m Argentinian
so it could be back to sub 800 soon
- The income tax isn't really "eliminated", that's not right, it just has a higher starting point and is now indexed to the monthly wage. Otherwise it required yearly updates that were quite messy. It starts to apply to gross salaries above 15x the minimum monthly wage (the starting point used to be WAY lower).
- 1.7 million pesos isn't really 5k USD, as no one has access to that exchange rate. It's more like 1800~2000 USD monthly.
Overall I think it's a good measure, but it still doesn't tackle the elephant(s) in the room: Having >40% poverty, having an unrealistic exchange rate, low minimum wage, informal economy and workers, problems renting/buying real-state, unsatisfactory education results...
Is an "electionist" meassure by the current president Sergio Massa (he is not officially president, but he is acting like one for more than a year) who is running for president.
Edit: People who are down voting could for example explain why it is acceptable to tax the labour of another human being, but not acceptable for the government to run a deficit or devalue the currency ... or default. Taxes on labour are a form of serfdom, one of the worst evils of humanity. Maybe acceptable when you have a cushy and high paid office job, but a satanic burden for those who are stuck in the hell of heavy and stressful labour for their survival.
Plus: desperate attempt for the current party to cling to power. Don't read too much into this event.
Massa knows he'll lose the election. This is a measure to destroy the economy even further, so the next government gets delivered a mess. Massa is playing a longer game here as he aims to get elected not this time, but in years later in a Messianic way ("I told you so" victory).
If Bullrich wins, she'll not be competent enough to fix the mess. If Milei wins, he'll appear as tyrant when new economic measures are put in place.
I'm not defending either side, I'm just providing my experienced viewpoint in populism.
Sad to the situation in Venezuela and Argentina. Maddening, that with such modern examples, everywhere else still thinks 'it won't happen here because we're <insert something condescending>'.
Any mess can be fixed if the people will it so.
Some retired professors were recalled to resume teaching after the end of the Cultural Revolution, but they were not necessarily 80 years old or living in remote mountain villages. Moreover, they were not the only source of qualified teachers, as some younger academics who survived the political turmoil also returned to their posts or were promoted. Furthermore, the first graduates after the reopening of universities did not have to teach the next class, as there were still entrance exams and admission quotas to select the best candidates. The government also implemented various policies and reforms to restore and improve the education system, such as expanding enrollment, increasing funding, diversifying curricula, and promoting scientific research.
El de la economía informal... es que os machacan a impuestos e inflación... es bárbaro lo que estáis pasando, y, en mi opinión, cómo os han tratado los políticos.
Mucha suerte y que salgáis lo más pronto posible de todo esto. Un saludo cordial.
https://www.oecd.org/tax/tax-policy/revenue-statistics-latin...
Interestingly enough, the DPRK ("North Korea") outlawed income taxes in 1974, calling them "remnants of an antiquated society."
Having a floor that exempts low incomes is probably fine and good though.
Yes, I live in one of them, Washington state. But your reasoning here is highly flawed:
1. Even within Washington, much of society's necessities are paid for by the federal government, which DOES use income taxes.
2. Instead of using income taxes, Washington simply relies on other taxes. Not having income taxes doesn't automatically mean the tax burden is lower.
3. Because it relies on other taxes, the state's overall tax burden is highly regressive*, with poorer people paying proportionately more of their income than richer people. This is great for me, a SWE, but it's a lot less great for poor and working class folks.
* The lowest income quintile pays 17.8% of income to state and local taxes, whereas the top 1% of income earners pay only 3% to state and local taxes - https://itep.org/whopays/washington/
That said, I don't have a problem with wealth taxes for sufficiently high net worth.
Yes they discovered that slavery has lower deadweight loss.
The argument agrees (as do I) that it is right for the government to collect taxes, and that many individuals (including myself) should pay taxes; believe me, I like having a stable society!! -- but "income" is not a good basis.
It comes down to two things: ownership and also what government should encourage (taxes are a way of "discouraging" things by adding an additional cost).
Labor. I and only I own my labor, else I am a slave. On what basis does the government have rights to the fruits of this? Why discourage me from employing my labor to the benefit of my countrymen?
Capital. If I deploy my capital, hopefully to make other's labor more efficient, I am taking the risk. Why should the government also charge me for this? Why discourage me from investing?
Land. Ahhh, here we have something. My ownership of my land is a right granted by the government (unlike my ownership of my labor). And land is only (economically) good for rent-seeking, which is economically harmful.
Taxes on land could fully fund the government, provide the wealth redistribution which is necessary to keep capitalist economies functioning for more than a few generations, and aligns with the foundational principles of democratic governments (natural law, rights of man vs government, etc).
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Georgism
This and a recent tax decrease have been forced by the fact that Milei has a strong first position as a candidate.Otherwise it would have never happened. It is all acting.
Greetings.