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Tom Jones: Tiny Desk (Home) Concert

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Love-Child of Cassandra and Sisyphus6/08/2021 7:51:01 am PDT

re: #111 No Malarkey!

Iā€™m still a proponent of a wealth tax. Unrealized gains are a bit tricky because the entire premise of ā€œunrealizedā€ implies things about the future.

Simple wealth tax: (1) have each person add up their assets (at present value.) (2) Then subtract liabilities (at present value.) (3) Annually tax the net assets at 1%.

If necessary, allow an individual to define their own fiscal year, and have them pay this tax quarterly.

Options, derivatives, and other abstract instruments are simply valued at their current market price.

To make this palatable to the average home owner, one can exempt oneā€™s primary residence below a certain value (say a million dollars.) Family farms (i.e., residence and employment are the same) perhaps have a larger exception.

A wealth tax like this has no where for a very rich person to hide. If they try to inflate their liabilities, they will just pay more whenever the liability comes to an end. If someone tries to rig the system by lowering the present value of their assets, then they will pay a larger amount via capital gains taxes (by requiring the capital gains calculations to use the same valuations as the wealth tax.)