
Progressive taxation: an aesthetic and moral defense
Author(s) -
Джим Чен,
James Ming Chen
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
advances in law studies
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2500-428X
pISSN - 2409-5087
DOI - 10.12737/988
Subject(s) - prosperity , treasury , politics , redistribution of income and wealth , duty , government (linguistics) , distribution of wealth , power (physics) , national wealth , redistribution (election) , distribution (mathematics) , economics , economic power , political economy , political science , economic policy , law , inequality , finance , public good , neoclassical economics , mathematical analysis , linguistics , physics , mathematics , quantum mechanics , philosophy
The power to tax is at once the power to create and the power to destroy. If the United States government hopes to discharge its primary duty as creator and protector of its citizens’ wealth, it must be willing to destroy wealth, from time to time, by redistributing it. More than any other tool, the means by which government finances and depletes its treasury affects the societal distribution of wealth. Differential taxation and targeted spending are the most significant and most effective means by which government can «gradually and continually… correct the distribution of wealth to prevent concentrations of power detrimental to the fair value of political liberty and fair equality of opportunity». Redistribution and
the attendant destruction of entrenched wealth serve as society’s ultimate weapons of «creative destruction». Of the many forces that
have propelled the United States to the economic, political, social, and military pinnacle of the modern world, its willingness to countenance radical technological and organizational upheaval probably ranks first. American prosperity depends on the federal government’s commitment to an economic environment in which citizens are able not only to amass large amounts of new wealth, but also to lose it in rapid and remorseless fashion.