RangerDave wrote:
Why would capital gains be any more of a true creation of wealth than labor output is? I mean heck, plenty of people made significant capital gains speculating during the housing bubble and the dot com bubble, but most of the "wealth" those bubbles produced turned out to be illusory.
Again, this is precisely why CGTs shouldn't exist in the first place. The reality of any investment generated wealth is circumspect until capitalization. Once capitalized it becomes currency. The value of that currency depends on a lot of things, including the aggregate value of inflation over the period of investment. So, tell me why the government should be able to take money, in absolute dollars, that may or may not be money in real dollars?
RangerDave wrote:
That aside, though, the basic arguments I see for taxing cap gains at the same rate as wage income are (i) fairness and (ii) avoiding economic distortions.
There is no parity in our taxation system as it stands. Any arguments for fairness are an appeal to emotion and an appeal to popularity that have no real economic validity. They are feel-good offerings that distort policy and stem from the misguided notion that you can manage the economy from the top down.
RangerDave wrote:
The fairness argument is based on the idea that, from the perspective of the individual taxpayer, income is income regardless of the source. If two people each make $100k/year, they can each support a $100k/year standard of living, regardless of whether the income is from wages or capital gains, so it would be unfair to tax one person more heavily than the other.
The current system already favors the guy making wages, since CGTs claimed as sole-source income are subject to the AMT at highest applicable marginal only, regardless of investment duration. You should really get a tax attorney to explain this to you. Consequently, it's highly likely that despite your protestations in this thread, the individual in question is already paying 39.6% across the board as income tax. Incidentally, that defeats the "fairness" argument pretty squarely.
RangerDave wrote:
In terms of economic distortions, taxing one type of economic activity more heavily than another will distort the market by pushing it towards the activity with the lower tax burden. If you tax cap gains lower than wages, more people will turn to investments than labor, companies will compensate employees with stock rather than wages, etc. That's basically exactly what happened with employer-provided healthcare, the housing bubble, and executive compensation changes.
It doesn't actually work that way in practice. First, employee compensation packages that include stock and stock options must declare the initial value as in year income, taxed as all other income gained in that year. And, just for the record, it's been that way since the late 70s. It seems to me that you're getting misinformation from someone who doesn't actually make their money from investments. And don't go bringing employer-provided healthcare insurance into the discussion, because that just further dilutes the conversation you're not really trying to have.
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Corolinth wrote:
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