Friday, January 18, 2013

Taxing the Rich

Kevin Williamson explains why raising taxes on the rich will result in higher pay for the rich and lower pay for the poor.

excerpt:
So, let’s say you’re Walmart, and your top hundred inventory-management, systems, and finance guys all come to you looking for a 10 percent bump because of the fiscal-cliff tax hike and the Obamacare tax hike. Walmart does not live and die by greeters or Cal Maine eggs — it lives and dies by logistics and finance, and it really needs people who are good at that. It will work as hard to keep its top talent as Apple will to keep its top engineering and design talent. So where does Walmart go to get that money to keep its top talent? If you have 100 high-wage specialists you really need to keep happy and tens of thousands of low-skilled greeters, cashiers, warehousemen, etc., all of whom you are pretty confident you can easily replace, you are going to be tempted to shift some money from the big, low-skilled pot to the small, high-skilled pot. Likewise, if Walmart has a supplier that represents 0.01 percent of its sales but relies on Walmart for 33 percent of its own sales, who do you think is going to prevail if Walmart decides it needs to knock prices down by a nickel?
I suppose that when liberals want to tax the rich, most don't understand the preceding paragraph, but even for those who do understand, then its a feature, not a bug, that taxing the rich will increase income inequality, not reduce it.

More poor people = more democrat voters

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