Responding to multiple comments in one post for the sake of space.
Xequecal wrote:
Consumption taxes just seem to me like a spiteful idea from people who hate the government.
I believe most economists are of the view that consumption taxes offer meaningful advantages over income taxes - e.g. more efficient, more transparent, encourage savings and investment, less of a drag on employment, etc. The fact that they're regressive is the most frequent criticism I hear, but there are ways of dealing with that. I'm not sure where I come down on this issue (don't know enough to say), but my impression is that there is an honest and theoretically sound argument in favor of a system based more on consumption taxes.
Vidicarre wrote:
Why doesn't good old Warren give what he thinks he should, if he's so upset about this?
This argument always bothers me, because it confuses means and ends. When someone advocates for a policy
as a means to achieving a large-scale end, rather than because they believe in the inherent moral importance of the means itself, then there's no reason for them to take personal action in the absence of that policy, because doing so doesn't help them achieve their desired end and has little or no inherent value of its own. For instance, if someone were to advocate for a policy banning the consumption of beef because they want to prevent the environmental damage caused by large-scale industrial beef farming, there's not really any compelling reason for them to personally stop eating beef until that policy is enacted, whereas if they're advocating for that policy because they think it's morally wrong to eat a cow, then they absolutely should stop eating beef no matter what the larger policy is. Or to flip the political narrative around, if someone advocates for increasing the number of troops because they think a larger standing force is strategically important, there's no reason for them to personally enlist, but if their position is instead based on the belief that military service is the moral duty of any good citizen, then they should personally enlist.
Kaffis Mark V wrote:
When you don't obsess over taking money from the rich, they can invest it. Invested money grows economies and businesses, providing jobs and income for the employed.
If money flows down in a largely frictionless manner, why wouldn't it flow up in the same way? "Invested money grows economies and businesses, providing jobs and income for the employed" vs. "Money spent on consumption grows economies and creates profits for businesses, providing capital and income for the owners". If it's good for the goose, shouldn't it be good for the gander? Of course, I don't believe money flows in a frictionless manner in either direction, which is why tax incidence matters. I'm just pointing out that the over-simplified trickle-down narrative we often hear from the right is no more persuasive than the over-simplified trickle-up narrative we often hear from the left.