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E.g. If I buy a GM car, I'm paying for it's production. If I buy a city lot, I'm paying the last guy in the (very expensive) chain letter. If I buy a city lot, I'm paying for all the value created by the nearby shops, jobs, businesses, streets, parks, theatres, stations, etc., BUT I'm not paying it to those people, I'm paying it to one guy.
I'm not sure what deflationary pressure you're writing about. Adding annual taxes to land values would lower sales prices of land, but of nothing else. Furthermore, collecting the capitalized value as an annual rental payment removes the incentive to speculatively hold land - freeing up valueable land for development, and generally lowering rental values. The net effect would be to develop underdeveloped private land in urban areas, reducing need to sprawl into the countryside. It also captures the value of public investment, especially from geographically constrained public goods such as transit, schools, utilities, and public safety.
In order to increase wages, you have to increase the demand for labor or reduce the supply of it.
I wish to increase the demand for labor by:
1) removing the tax wedge between take home pay and employer's costs. This doesnt just directly allow employees to take home more money, but also reduces the cost of employing the next, new employee. The net effect is a combination of more employment and higher wages. This would require eliminating the payroll tax, and most of the personal income tax. 2) removing the tax wege between take home earnings and investment cost for PRODUCTIVE, LABOR-CREATED Capital. If the tax on buildings is reduces, more buildings will be built, and more masons, carpenters, and other trades will be employed. This goes not just for buildings, but for refineries, factories, offices, reactors, shipyards, orchards, hospitals, etc. In other words, taxes on LABOR-CREATED Capital are not-so-indirect taxes on Labor itself. 3) dropping all this lost revenue onto taxes on exploitation, pollution and occupation. The upshot of this would be that all titles and government-granted privileges (such as timber rights or broadcast rights) would be periodically auctioned - perhaps annually, perhaps for a longer period. I fully expect that such resources charges (including local land resource charges) could replace current government spending IF the other taxes are removed. I need the other taxes removed, because land values increase with increased productivity. 4) A special privilege case, is the ability of private banks to lend circulating money into existence through fractional reserve banking. Eliminating this special privilege could i) eliminate the Nat'l debt. ii) eliminate the payments on the nat'l debt ($300B/y) iii) generate public income ($300B/y) iv) give us a rock-solid non-inflationary monetary system.
Note that, under my system, a company (re)starting an industry would 1) be able to obtain land for less than it can now (reduced by eliminating speculation and by eliminating loan interest payments) 2) be able to build any labor-built capital without paying taxes on it or it's returns. 3) pay no taxes on anything but what they take or withold from others: stuff they generally would have to pay a greater amount for now, if they purchased it from an existing 'owner'.
Also, under my system, tariffs would generally be unneccessary. The taxes would be raised from Land and Resources within the US. The tax base could not be offshored. The elimination of taxes against productivity would mean that productive jobs would FLOCK to the US. The taxes / rents against resource use would ensure that the fixed resources of the US were used VERY EFFICIENTLY so as to provide for the maximum sustainable productivity, IOW a lot of jobs. I would include tariffs agaist countries that pollute our atmosphere (including Carbon) as well as against countries that have a worse GINI (distribution of wealth) index than us. As for protecting us industries - I promise we wouldn't need it. Individual companies might, such as sugar farmers, but in general, demand for labor would be high, and we'd have more than enough work to keep us busy. If the EU wants to subsidize Jetliners and sell them for less than it would cost us to built them, then so be it. Their loss is our gain. Boeing's stockholders might suffer, but it's skilled employees wouldn't
As for the 5 sided diet, you're absolutely right. As for it's location, it's actually across the river in Arlington County, VA, where the people have voting representation in Congress. Just for fun, I believe the US spends more on the military than the rest of the world combined. I personally would support a Swiss style military at $340/pp ($100B total).
There is no doubt that tariffs raise the price of domestic goods. If enacted as protective measures, they raise the price such that more expensive domestic production can be effective. However, this has the net effect of taxing the consumer, reducing the power he has to make other purchases - which keeps someone else from being employed supplying that purchase.
As for the minimum wage, I've no problem with raising it a bit, though I believe that a large raise is impossible to dictate through legislation. My best guess is that eliminating the payroll tax (15%) the personal income tax against wages (15%) state & local income taxes (7%) sales taxes (1%) as well as an increase in productivity from access to land and capital (15%) would raise average wages by at least 50%, while giving even the most marginal employee an opportunity to work. In addition to the massive raise in wages, the cost of housing would decrease (though it would densify), by as much as 30%
Furthermore, as a pie-in-the sky, if we could put the pentagon on a diet, and eliminate corporate welfare, and empower local communities to race to the top; we could drastically reduce federal spending. I suggest from $2,600B to $600B. Most of that difference would be recaptured in local rents. I've no doubt that such a reduction in spending could allow for the collection of more than $5,000B in government revenue. Leaving half that for State, Local, and Federal spending, the remainder could be returned as a demogrant (more than $8,000 a person, just for being part of society - since it's merely a redistribution of socially created wealth).
So, In my ideal country: Median Household Income would be $64,000 (vs. $43,000) PLUS demogrant (3x$8,000 = $24,000) total annual income $88,000
New home construction price = $150,000 New home lot price = ~$0 + ~$4,000 a year as a percent of median family's income <25%
Discretionary median family income after housing: $66,000
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