No?
Can you show me where Keynes addressed taxing rich people? I mean he might have, I don't know.
If he never addressed it, it seems safe to say doing it was not a central part of his theory.
I don't know if he addressed it. Do you know?
No?
Can you show me where Keynes addressed taxing rich people? I mean he might have, I don't know.
If he never addressed it, it seems safe to say doing it was not a central part of his theory.
If he never addressed it, it seems safe to say doing it was not a central part of his theory.
I don't know if he addressed it. Do you know?
These people claim he addressed it:
Page 79
https://books.google.com/books?id=W...ImZHznaKBxwIVCNWACh1-iQqL#v=onepage&q&f=false
Page 176
https://books.google.com/books?id=z...ImZHznaKBxwIVCNWACh1-iQqL#v=onepage&q&f=false
That's great. Does this particular form of investing help the Greek economy?
But still, it logically follows that if the only way to unlock prosperity is taxing rich people you'd want to have lots of rich people.
Only as a poor second to a more even distribution of resources in the first place.
Thus with no rich people to tax your economy falls apart.
You're not making any sense. You have to tax people with money. If all the money is concentrated in a few rich people, then you tax them. If the money is spread over more people, then you can spread the tax burden over more people. Most income tax systems manage this automatically.
What's happened in Greece is that the money has gone to rich people via corruption, and to Germany via sharing a common currency, which acts to raise prices in Greece and lower them in Germany. The EU's plan was to use the extra borrowing and fact of EU membership to stimulate growth to make up the difference. Unfortunately it didn't work.
Once you have attained that liberal utopia with the assets redistributed who are you going to tax to fund it?
Who the fuck was talking about complete redistribution of all assets? Togo was talking about simply having progressive taxation. Only a lunatic would equate this with the total redistribution of all assets so that everyone has the same.
You are aware, I presume, that it is possible for a little of something to be better than none, while a lot is not better still?
If not, then I suggest that, as a little salt in your food is essential to life, you should be trying to subsist on a diet of nothing else.
Or perhaps we should ask you, when you attain that capitalist utopia where one person finally has all of the money, with whom is he going to trade?
"If that money is spread over more people".
That means taking it from the rich.
Well then you shouldn't have any problem showing where Keynes said these things.
While you're at it, I would be curious to see where Keynes advocated the "abolition of interest" as that second one claims he did.
hello?

I don't know if he addressed it. Do you know?
My position is that raising taxes on rich people was not part of his theory.
Without someone producing evidence it was I win.
from Wiki on Keynesian economics said:To Keynes, excessive saving, i.e. saving beyond planned investment, was a serious problem, encouraging recession or even depression. ....
Keynes's ideas influenced Franklin D. Roosevelt's view that insufficient buying-power caused the Depression.
from the Wiki on Keynesianism said:Investment by government in infrastructure injects income into the economy by creating business opportunity, employment and demand and reversing the effects of the aforementioned imbalance.[1]
from the Wiki said:Keynes argued that when a glut occurred, it was the over-reaction of producers and the laying off of workers that led to a fall in demand and perpetuated the problem. ..... Keynes rejected the idea that cutting wages would cure recessions. He examined the explanations for this idea and found them all faulty. He also considered the most likely consequences of cutting wages in recessions, under various different circumstances. He concluded that such wage cutting would be more likely to make recessions worse rather than better.
Since the end of the nineteenth century significant progress towards the removal of very great disparities of wealth and income has been achieved through the instrument of direct taxation — income tax and surtax and death duties — especially in Great Britain. Many people would wish to see this process carried much further, but they are deterred by two considerations; partly by the fear of making skilful evasions too much worth while and also of diminishing unduly the motive towards risk-taking, but mainly, I think, by the belief that the growth of capital depends upon the strength of the motive towards individual saving and that for a large proportion of this growth we are dependent on the savings of the rich out of their superfluity. Our argument does not affect the first of these considerations. But it may considerably modify our attitude towards the second. For we have seen that, up to the point where full employment prevails, the growth of capital depends not at all on a low propensity to consume but is, on the contrary, held back by it; and only in conditions of full employment is a low propensity to consume conducive to the growth of capital. Moreover, experience suggests that in existing conditions saving by institutions and through sinking funds is more than adequate, and that measures for the redistribution of incomes in a way likely to raise the propensity to consume may prove positively favourable to the growth of capital.
No, they weren't.For the people who keep making Kensayan arguments about Greece:
Deficit spending can be a good thing to prop up an economy in a recession.
While Greece was in a recession the real problem was they were doing unsustainable deficit spending in good times also. In that case deficit spending is continuing to dig deeper when you find yourself in a hole.
The difference between science and religion is that scientists argue about what the evidence shows to be true, mentioning individuals who came up with theories as a courtesy to give great thinkers their due; while religionists argue about what the great thinkers said, on the assumption that the words of the greats are of far more import than mere evidence.
Who gives a shit what Keynes did or did not say? Whether or not taxing the rich is a good idea to get out of recession has exactly fuck all to do with whether or not Keynes said it was.
You guys sound like a bunch of creationists arguing about whether Darwin recanted evolution on his deathbed - as though that would somehow change the factuality of the Theory of Evolution.
Do you want economics to be the dismal science, or are you happier with keeping it as the dismal religion?
Well then you shouldn't have any problem showing where Keynes said these things.
While you're at it, I would be curious to see where Keynes advocated the "abolition of interest" as that second one claims he did.
Here you go:
https://ebooks.adelaide.edu.au/k/keynes/john_maynard/k44g/chapter24.html#chapter24
Keynes discusses taxing the rich and interest rates in this chapter.
Here you go:
https://ebooks.adelaide.edu.au/k/keynes/john_maynard/k44g/chapter24.html#chapter24
Keynes discusses taxing the rich and interest rates in this chapter.
Can you point me to the parts where he suggests higher taxes on the rich > lower taxes on the rich or where he advocates the abolition of interest in there?
Here you go:
https://ebooks.adelaide.edu.au/k/keynes/john_maynard/k44g/chapter24.html#chapter24
Keynes discusses taxing the rich and interest rates in this chapter.
Can you point me to the parts where he suggests higher taxes on the rich > lower taxes on the rich or where he advocates the abolition of interest in there?
... I think it is a field, like metaphysics that can be taken over by people with dominant personalities and enforced on others in a most rigorously religious basis. ...
Can you point me to the parts where he suggests higher taxes on the rich > lower taxes on the rich or where he advocates the abolition of interest in there?
Sure. Right here.
https://ebooks.adelaide.edu.au/k/keynes/john_maynard/k44g/chapter24.html#chapter24
Can you point me to the parts where he suggests higher taxes on the rich > lower taxes on the rich or where he advocates the abolition of interest in there?
But he cannot understand it for you.