>A billionaire who got their wealth from renting apartments is like a little mini government. The renter (taxpayer) pays to live in the place in an exchange for certain goods and services. The billionaire (government) who collects rent (taxes) can spend it as they see fit. The effects are the same.
I disagree with this analogy. I’m not forced to rent to a particular landlord, or any landlord at all. If I feel I’m not getting what I paid for, I can choose to spend my money elsewhere for rent, food, entertainment, or whatever. The switching cost on this is very low. Within the last year I felt Amazon wasn’t a good value anymore, so I cancelled prime and started looking at other stores to get what I need. Amazon got less of my money, and I still got what I need, often by cutting out the middleman.
With a government and taxes, I have no choice. I must pay them specifically. If they decide to raises taxes, I can’t do anything about it, I must pay. The only option I would have is moving to another country, which means there is a significant level of lock-in. Also, the government should be spending how the people see fit. Sure, we vote, but how much tax payer money has gone into funding surveillance programs, for example, that I don’t think any tax payers really want. If my landlord used my rent money to monitor my phone calls, I’d stop doing business with them immediately and seek legal action. It’s likely they would either need to change their business practices or they’d go out of business.
The government is very much like a monopoly in this context. If there was a monopoly on housing where you live, would you be calling to raise rents, trusting that the landlord would use that money to make things better for you by leveraging the services of local businesses? Where is their incentive to do that when you have nowhere else to go? They’d likely raise the rents and divide the extra profits amongst their friends. Meanwhile, all the renters have less to spend with those local businesses.
If the government is given more money, are they going to actually make our life better, or will they fund more questionable programs? If it doesn’t go the way I (or you) want, what’s our recourse? We can’t stop paying (withholding rent), we can’t realistically move (finding a new apartment). A country/government is a completely different dynamic than a landlord.
Not to mention, with the way the US has been using debt, I don’t think they care how much tax revenue is coming in. They just spend and spend, to let future generations worry about it. This isn’t an admirable behavior for those entrusted with the budget.
Maybe the difference in our point of view is that I’m not viewing billionaires as a different and special class of citizen. I’m not interested in paying more in taxes until they show me they can be responsible and use it well. Once they do that, depending on what the planned increases will do, we can talk/vote on it. Just taxing the rich for the sake of taxing the rich, and hoping they will fix things doesn’t seem like a real plan. Are you willing to pay more than you currently do? How much? Are you already doing it voluntarily? Why or why not? I can’t in good conscience call for other people to pay in more when I wouldn’t be interested in doing it myself, and the rich already shoulder a significant percentage of the overall tax burden.
This also completely ignores that most wealth at that level is held in company stock, and taxing unrealized gains isn’t practical or an idea that should even be entertained. So what is really being taxed?
I disagree with this analogy. I’m not forced to rent to a particular landlord, or any landlord at all. If I feel I’m not getting what I paid for, I can choose to spend my money elsewhere for rent, food, entertainment, or whatever. The switching cost on this is very low. Within the last year I felt Amazon wasn’t a good value anymore, so I cancelled prime and started looking at other stores to get what I need. Amazon got less of my money, and I still got what I need, often by cutting out the middleman.
With a government and taxes, I have no choice. I must pay them specifically. If they decide to raises taxes, I can’t do anything about it, I must pay. The only option I would have is moving to another country, which means there is a significant level of lock-in. Also, the government should be spending how the people see fit. Sure, we vote, but how much tax payer money has gone into funding surveillance programs, for example, that I don’t think any tax payers really want. If my landlord used my rent money to monitor my phone calls, I’d stop doing business with them immediately and seek legal action. It’s likely they would either need to change their business practices or they’d go out of business.
The government is very much like a monopoly in this context. If there was a monopoly on housing where you live, would you be calling to raise rents, trusting that the landlord would use that money to make things better for you by leveraging the services of local businesses? Where is their incentive to do that when you have nowhere else to go? They’d likely raise the rents and divide the extra profits amongst their friends. Meanwhile, all the renters have less to spend with those local businesses.
If the government is given more money, are they going to actually make our life better, or will they fund more questionable programs? If it doesn’t go the way I (or you) want, what’s our recourse? We can’t stop paying (withholding rent), we can’t realistically move (finding a new apartment). A country/government is a completely different dynamic than a landlord.
Not to mention, with the way the US has been using debt, I don’t think they care how much tax revenue is coming in. They just spend and spend, to let future generations worry about it. This isn’t an admirable behavior for those entrusted with the budget.
Maybe the difference in our point of view is that I’m not viewing billionaires as a different and special class of citizen. I’m not interested in paying more in taxes until they show me they can be responsible and use it well. Once they do that, depending on what the planned increases will do, we can talk/vote on it. Just taxing the rich for the sake of taxing the rich, and hoping they will fix things doesn’t seem like a real plan. Are you willing to pay more than you currently do? How much? Are you already doing it voluntarily? Why or why not? I can’t in good conscience call for other people to pay in more when I wouldn’t be interested in doing it myself, and the rich already shoulder a significant percentage of the overall tax burden.
This also completely ignores that most wealth at that level is held in company stock, and taxing unrealized gains isn’t practical or an idea that should even be entertained. So what is really being taxed?