Timsup2nothin
Deity
- Joined
- Apr 2, 2013
- Messages
- 46,737
Oh, I'll grant we have tons of immobile wealth. My hair-splitting is that it's not the same as immobile money. Because we live in such a currency-dominated society, it's money that encourages production. Wealth only sometimes does. (except as an ephemeral 'motivation')
Ah. But doesn't the money have to be in some way backed by wealth to be effective? The initial premise here revolves around the point that a budget surplus is a drag on the economy, and I think that drag is attributable more to the removal of actual wealth into the hands of government than as a shortage of currency.
The issue of the budget surplus dragging the economy, in my opinion, comes from the method that is typically used to create that surplus...that being taxation on production. Taxation on production (ie income tax) creates no compensatory reduction in the accumulation of wealth by others (who are just as interested in getting out of debt as the government, with 'getting out of debt' being yet another aspect of accumulating wealth, just operating in the range of negative numbers). So you have wealth being drawn out of circulation in all directions, which stalls productivity no matter how much currency you throw at it.
I think a tax on accumulation rather than production (ie property tax) could produce a balanced budget or surplus without being a drag on the economy because it would just redistribute the accumulation rather than disincentivise productivity.
Of course people with large accumulations of wealth would prefer to balance the budget by burning me at the stake, and even though there doesn't seem to be any direct connection between burning me at the stake and balancing the budget they are much better represented by the government than I am, so I tend to lay pretty low.