July 2nd, 2013, 2:09 pm
QuoteOriginally posted by: Traden4AlphaQuoteOriginally posted by: exneratunriskQuoteOriginally posted by: Traden4AlphaI think I agree with gardener3 on this:QuoteOriginally posted by: exneratunriskIMO, it is only one-sided to discuss tax as one of the inputs into a wealth pool and not the output (IMO, it is much more lamentable that the output is so poor and the operating system is so fat - and agreed the input system is way to complicated).Is the input structure fair? (can this be analyzed without analysis of the output structure?)Simplifying (again): Is it a fair objective to create an economy that does not produce bubbles and crisis?Although this objective seems laudable, it's probably a bad idea on two levels. First, it presumes that all examples of exuberant investment are bubbles and that decision makers are always right in their assessments of over-investment. The entire nature of innovation, especially ground-breaking and disruptive innovation is that no one knows the ultimate value of the investment. Second, it assumes that bubbles and crises don't serve a broader purpose. The over-investment phase of the bubble drives widespread adoption of a new technology, spurs the development of new applications of that technology, and creates a lot of surplus assets that can be used in new, unforeseen ways. Even the crisis is "good" because it forces reform in over-weight private and public organizations.Overall, I agree with NNT that achieving antifragility implies permitting and even encouraging some exposure to negative events.QuoteOriginally posted by: exneratunriskIf yes, do we have a common sense about money as a means by which members of a society can settle their debts to one another? Money is a convenient standard for a store of value and a medium of exchange. Debts -- exchanges displaced in time -- are but a subset of money's role. The danger of debt is the same as the danger of all future promises (including insurance, pensions, warrantees, etc.) in being a claim too easily offered that is then redeemable in a future which may be more uncertain than people realize.QuoteOriginally posted by: exneratunriskCan we agree that "housing" market mechanics (speculative economy) tend more to bubble/crisis than "factory" market mechanics (real economy (products and services))?The factory economy is an anachronism from a more glacial time of the world economy. Today's innovation-driven economy requires a speculative mindset. Creativity is intrinsically speculative. But maybe we can agree that creativity tends more to bubble/crisis! QuoteOriginally posted by: exneratunriskIf yes, .. with behavioral simplification ... potatoes for consumption, a green house for real market investment, a house for speculative ...(take a month),Those who have 1000 net income must buy potatoes for 1000Those who have 10.000 may buy potatoes for 5000, invest in a green house for 2500 and in a house for 2500Those who have a million may buy potatoes for 100.000, invest in a green house for 200.000 and in a house for 700.000.....Isn't this what happens in all current market economies? The rich do pay more for potatoes by buying the luxury counterparts of those goods (e.g., the heirloom potato puree with truffles at a 3 star restaurant vs. fries at a fast food outlet). And the rich do invest more in productive assets.People decry the fact that the top 1% "own" 40% of the assets but fail to understand that the rich version of ownership is so vastly different from the poor version of ownership. When a poor person owns something, it's it almost always for their personal and exclusive use. But when the rich own something, it is usually owned* as a productive asset creating valuable goods and services that are used by all. In fact, it is by the careful and innovative management of productive assets* that the rich become richer. That is, ownership by the poor is consumptive and ownership by the rich is productive*. (* yes, I know there are exceptions with rich people owning some lavish and strictly personal assets like luxury cars, mansions, yachts, and private jets but I'm sure the data would show that these personal assets constitute a very small percentage of the assets of the rich.)QuoteOriginally posted by: exneratunriskSo, IMO, beside many other selfish reasons, governments become strong if they enable a minimum status of the poor and repair the failures of the richSo, tax is (also) an anti-stupidity measure - consequently it is fair when progressive, IMO I would have said that the rich must be strong to repair the failures of government and that government repairs the failures of the poor more so than the failures of the rich. In the long-term, bail-outs for the poor (social spending) would seem to exceed bailouts for the rich (although bailouts for the rich are especially galling and could be reduced with better risk segmentation regulations).I am afraid, we will not find a referee who will be able to verify what fair is? I may have taken an extreme counterposition in my conclusions - but there are some macro economic principles that are before ideology? We are in agreement about the solid store-for-value and the liquid transaction function of money - but money creation is debt based?!And I also thought that it is obvious that the housing market mechanics induces needless buble/crisis behaviour?Yes, impartial referees are not easy to find. Moreover, my position on this issue may be confounded by an insistence for tax effectiveness (not just fairness) in a long-term macro-economic context. That is, I also consider the extent that the allocation of a society's resources should be in the hands of a centralized state vs. heterogenous, distributed agents (who have shown some evidence of providing a return on investment). Personally, I think decentralized, independent allocation is superior and should be encouraged, not penalized by taxes on returns. I'd be fine with high taxes on luxury consumption if they replaced taxes on productive gains. We should use tax policy to encourage greedy bastards to generate higher returns for society!Yes, we do agree about the store-for-value and the liquid transaction functions of money. But the "creation" of money through debt is a more subtle issue. It's not just debt that creates money, but any transfer of money at time_now that has an explicit or implicit expectation of a return of that money in the future. If I buy $1000 in shares in a company during their IPO, I've created money -- I still "have" my $1000 on my balance sheet but now the company has $1000, too. And if the company takes "my" $1000 and buys a machine tool, then the company still has $1000 (in capital equipment) but the tool maker has $1000 also. The economy now has $3000 and no banks or debts were involved. As you note, double-entry bookkeeping is the mechanism for creating created money. It's the discrepancy between the expectation of return (on debt, equity, and any other capital purchase) and the actual return on that transaction that generates the bubble and the crisis. A crisis can happen whether money creation was done with debt or with equity.Finally, I'll agree that the housing market mechanics can induce bubble/crisis behaviour, but disagree about the needless part. IMO, the sensible levels of housing price variations are not obvious because the changing nature of housing over time. The "true" value of housing can change substantially under the influence of demographic, technological, sociological, and macro-economic changes. Moreover, today's housing market mechanics enable speculation which is usually a socially beneficial process in reifying future returns under uncertainty and encouraging investment to forestall future shortages. As such, there's no a priori rate of asset price increase that is "wrong" even if it might be extremely obvious post hoc.Just about the money creation - you perfectly describe the in-the-flow situation (I have and spend intelligently and the next spends intelligently ... this perfect intelligence would not need a progressive taxation). But what I mean with debt-based is the possibility to create something from nothing. Interestingly enough this possibility is rejected by not so few economists (the balance mechanics).With this in the bag, I come back to my original provocation: to not destroy the great, programmable money system, intelligence and responsibility is required. IMO, we have this tax system, mostly because of stupidity - deep freeze capital is needless, if not available to transform ideas into margins?(You know) I agree with you about the need for more decentralization (even, or especially, the money creation ...) .. for a better wealth pool balance.My rationale: I am a null in macro. It is just a try to put things together in a systems view.Edit: after sleeping ... the understanding of the money system as debt-based and the debt transfer mechanism is essential. I do not "rent" money, I own it and its circulation is an exchange of ownership. If I get 1000 from wherever it is on the passive side (a debt), if I buy sw for 1000 I transfer the debt to the passive side of the sw vendor (1000 on my active side) and so on. If I resell sw for 1200 I can redeem my 1000 ...And this is great. But the name "debt money" scares ... and more and more (cowards) want "Monetative" (in German), a centralization of money creation and even economic transactions ... system programming only.To defend the great debt-based system (against the monetativists), we need to understand that the money (debt) has different "use flags". It matters what it is used for. Tax is one control possibility? One with a second effect: money for hard and soft infrastructure projects, ....
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exneratunrisk on July 2nd, 2013, 10:00 pm, edited 1 time in total.