BigBallinStalin wrote: PLAYER57832 wrote:BigBallinStalin wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:BigBallinStalin wrote: It simply creates an incentive to not invest in stocks (I think bonds as well, if they're counted as capital gains). Since saving/investment leads to the accumulation of wealth (thus future production, employment, goods, etc.), a tax that discourages this doesn't seem like a good idea.
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This is the whole problem. It is NOT accumulation of wealth in stocks that assures production and employment.
It is, instead, average people buying stuff and moving the economy forward through their purchases that really build our economy.
How is that stuff created? I.e., how do businesses raise money?
LOL... I can point to plenty of companies who did not need huge stock offerings and the like to get started. In fact, there is this little place by the name of Microsoft that did just that. Of course later they did do the stock thing, but did they require tax breaks to encourage investment?
Okay, PLAYER. So you acknowledge that some firms raise funds by selling stocks? I hope you do.
Of course.
BigBallinStalin wrote:Tangent to your tangent: Even if Microsoft never sold stock for awhile (or if ever), it doesn't justify that stocks are unnecessary. Debt ratios differ across industries and firms; the option of selling stocks, bonds, keep money in the bank, acquiring capital, etc. varies.[/tangent]
Now you are twisting what I said. I never said that we should not have stocks, not at all. I said that using
low taxes to encourage that investment is inappropriate.
BigBallinStalin wrote:Let's look at what you said:
" It is NOT accumulation of wealth in stocks that assures production and employment. It is, instead, average people buying stuff and moving the economy forward through their purchases that really build our economy."
Getting back to the point, the accumulation of wealth which leads to greater output and employment isn't just from "average people buying stuff." How does all that stuff come into fruition?
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People who are creative, who have the education to do things and who are able to convince enough people their idea is sound to attract some investors who see gain.
The problem is this idea that the government is supposed to treat these investments differently from other earnings under the guise that it will somehow help investments.
BUT, truly before that you have to have resources. NATURAL resources. Without a good agricultural base, a country is at serious risk. A smaller country can survive by specializing without much agriculture, but a large country like ours cannot. we also need minerals, woods, etc. However, they don't have to be new minerals. Recycled products, manufacturing processes that use less materials.. all of those help. Using fewer employees, however is not one of those. That only helps the economy when there is a labor surplus. Beyond that, it helps those at the top. Cutting workers to make a larger profit (note.. I did not say just to make a profit, I specifically said LARGER profit) hurts us all, particularly when the product resulting is poorer.
A lot of the current tax policies reward companies that do just that over companies who provide increases in employment. They do that because the system artificially supports creation /accumulation of money as opposed to any real goods or service production.
The truth is that such tax differences only really matter for someone investing LOTS of money. It encourages people to invest solely for tax benefits. But, you cannot just look at the tax policy in isolation. There are plenty of other rules that heavily favor folks wanting to plop down huge amounts of money on some company without ANY requirement that that company turn about and really make money, create jobs or truly do any of the other things you argue we need investment to do. Our system punishes people who work, but rewards those who have large amounts of money to invest.