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- Newsgroups: sci.econ
- Path: sparky!uunet!wupost!micro-heart-of-gold.mit.edu!uw-beaver!cs.ubc.ca!fs1.ee.ubc.ca!jmorriso
- From: jmorriso@ee.ubc.ca (John Paul Morrison)
- Subject: Re: NO! Re: flat taxes - yes!!!
- Message-ID: <1992Nov16.051341.24699@ee.ubc.ca>
- Keywords: flat tax
- Organization: University of BC, Electrical Engineering
- References: <markts.721352037@mcl> <1992Nov11.103204.3702@ee.ubc.ca> <23978@hacgate.SCG.HAC.COM>
- Date: Mon, 16 Nov 1992 05:13:41 GMT
- Lines: 103
-
- In article <23978@hacgate.SCG.HAC.COM> tucker@shiva.UUCP (George Tucker) writes:
- >In article <1992Nov11.103204.3702@ee.ubc.ca> jmorriso@ee.ubc.ca (John Paul Morrison) writes:
- >>
- >>I think the rich should pay more taxes in some areas: it costs more in
- >>policing to keep the rich at a comparative level of safety. After all,
- >>they are more of a target. Rich people should probably pay more for
- >>fire fighting: all those big houses take more firemen to put out
- >>big fires when big houses catch on fire. (OK, perhaps I'm assuming
- >>alot about crime patterns. But it does seem like there is more incentive
- >>to rob and kidnap well off people)
- >
- >Rich people are much less likely to be targets of violent crime. They
- >are also less likely to suffer a loss from theft. Amounts are probably
- >larger, but that is not a State concern. Rich people get more protection,
- >but it is probably not proportional to income. Sorry, this argument is
- >not a good one for progressive taxation.
-
- Just where do you think the violence would move to, if the rich and middle
- class weren't paying for police service? If the very rich aren't victims
- of violent crime, why do they spend so much of their personal income
- on body gaurds, security systems etc.?
-
- Anyway, I would be loath to argue for "progressive" taxation, but some
- services WILL cost more for certain people.
- >
- >You might try the approach that rich people get more benefit from the
- >infrastructure to produce their income. I believe that would be more
- >fruitful.
- >
- >>it is cheaper to subsidize the poor, than have the poor turn into
- >>violent, rioting, gang joining criminals who will car-jack your
- >>BMW or sell crack to your innocent middle-class teenagers.
- >>(funny, sounds just like the USA)
- >
- >Subsidizing the poor is good politics, and accomplishes nothing. Helping
- >the poor become non-poor is better economics.
-
- I agree totally with helping the poor become non-poor.
-
- But subsidizing the poor may actually do something: like reduce crime etc.
- (it may not, but then I wonder why the USA has so much violent crime, and
- other G7 countriess do not. The other G7 countries have social programs,
- and the USA has very little. I am not saying there is a cause and effect
- relationship, but it is worth looking at. I also don't believe that
- there is more violent crime in the USA because of guns. But that is also
- debatable).
-
- You don't specify how you help the poor to become non-poor. Chances are
- it would involve some kind of subsidy, like education or training. There
- is only so much you can do with tax incentives (to the poor anyway).
- (even lending money to the poor to go to university is a subsidy, since
- the money could be lent in a less riskey way)
-
- What I am saying about social subsidies, is that a certain amount might be
- cheaper, than an equivalent amount of spending on something else.
- Example: *suppose* for a moment that $X on police protection ruduces
- crime by Y. Now *if* spending $X on a social progruduces crim
- by a larger amount.
-
- Now this may be false: it might be better to spend it on policing, and
- spend nothing on social subsidies. it would certainly be difficult to
- measure the effectiveness accurately. I am not advocating social programs
- as a blanket solution, I am suggesting that they might have some
- rational merit (a certain amount might be cheaper), and that this
- should not be overlooked, just because some people have a moral
- view that says "let the bums rot". Paying a certain amount for police
- service and paying a certain amount for social services may be
- more effective at reducing crime that paying all for police services
- and 0 for social services.
-
- As for proof: I can't think of any studies, but perhaps the fact
- that other G7 countries spend a little ore on social programs, and
- have less crime than the USA is some evidence. At least it's
- evidence to not write off social programs 100%, and maybe
- some more study should be done in this area.
-
- >
- >They will sell crack to your innocent middle-class teenagers as long
- >as drugs are illegal and highly profitable. The market for crack is
- >a rational response to the War On Drugs (WOD). The WOD is a government
- >price support system fundamental to the kinder gentler War On Poverty.
- >It is intended to break the cycle of poverty by encouraging development
- >of an entrepreneurial spirit. :^{)
-
-
- I agree with you here as well. (I believe in the free market, and also
- with Buckley's ideas on legalizing drugs that you are advocating here).
-
-
- >
- > George Tucker tucker@shiva.hac.com
- > "Innocence is irrelevant."
- > Select two: The Borg
- > US Judicial System
-
-
- --
- __________________________________________________________________________
- John Paul Morrison |
- University of British Columbia, Canada |
- Electrical Engineering | .sig file without a cause
- jmorriso@ee.ubc.ca VE7JPM |
- ________________________________________|_________________________________
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