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Tresha Faye Haefner's avatar

This is a cool idea and a good point. I think it could work, and maybe we could get folks to invest in civilization voluntarily, but I think it would be more secure to make it mandatory. I don't think anyone should be allowed to be a billionaire in the first place for the same reason I don't want anyone in America to become a King. It's a threat to the freedom of the rest of us. Still, I feel like it would be easier to get billionaires to invest willingly in civilization than to get everyone to vote to change the tax codes. So, how do we do it?

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J.K. Lund's avatar

Interesting and thought-provoking piece. The problem with the comparison between American and Roman elites are many. First, I would question how accurate accounting was back then and if we can really say for certain Roman Elites were more generous than their American counterparts.

Also, Rome has 1,000 years of history to consider. Much of that wealth and dynamism was generated under the Roman Republic when it was a relatively "inclusive" society. But the Republic fell and gave way to the Empire, an extractive regime, that drew wealth and power away from the masses and toward elites. Indeed, above all, that is why it slowly crumbled.

You correctly note that wealth taxes, as attractive as they are on the surface, are terrible policy. They are difficult to enforce, easy to evade, and generally self-defeating. The goal of the tax system should be, first and foremost, not to arbitrarily tax wealth, but to tax "unearned wealth."

We don't want to discourage or punish people from working, producing, innovating...etc. We do, however, want to prevent them from reaping the benefits of that which they didn't create. A Land Value Tax is the ultimate tool in this regard. As I discussed here, its a wealth tax that actually does work: https://www.lianeon.org/p/just-tax-the-land

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