#capitalism is not...
* ... large corporations
* ... greed
* ... the rich taking advantage of the poor
* ...unfair labor wages
capitalism is...
*... fair market prices determined by value
*... markets that are not and can not be manipulated
*... fair wages for fair work based on the value contributed
*... poor people having equal chance as rich to market their skills
*.... a free market, a fair market.
I'd add to that list:
*... value determined by the market participants
Also, "free" as in "freedom", (or free beer, too, if that brings in more customers).
(clarification - no need to respond)
I just had a brewery favorite my "free beer" toot and thought others might have misunderstood the metaphor also.
"Free beer" in the economics context means something like UBI or other similar transfer to the general population so wealth is more evenly distributed and more people can participate in markets so the markets function better ("more customers").
Kind of like "Build Back Butter", something like that.
@Pat UBI sounds like a wonderful idea. My proposal for an UBI implementation is where we take 75% of the money from every worker's pay check and give it with no conditions asked backed to their employer. That way the employer has more money to pay wages with and naturally will give everyone a raise!
The idea is to provide a mechanism whereby the effects of concentrated wealth, as we discussed elsewhere in this thread, could be mitigated, so that there will be more participants and then the markets and price discovery would function better.
Your proposal (facetious, I assume) would do the opposite, making fewer participants.
Just a few basis points on all gross income, no deductions, no exemptions, would be enough to fund such a thing. If the tax is a flat tax, no loopholes, and the UBI is distributed in a similar manner with no favoritism, and so as to increase market participation, that's a good thing. And the government can't muck things up. It's automatic. Everybody pays a tiny fraction of income.
It's better than "Build Back Better" where all the polititians and government cronies decide who gets the money in a corrupt fashion.
@Pat yea my example was facetious.
As I said earlier concentration of wealth is not an issue as it doesnt reduce the participants as you suggest. Wealth is counter intuitive because the second you start thinking of it as a fixed value that can be redistributed at all is when you fail (IMO) to understand it.
When you distribute the wealth artificially the wealth effectively evapoates because you have pushed the wealth from investment vehicles (what the wealthy mostly do with it) to non-interest bearing assets, largely things which have little or no resale value, at least in part. You effectively move the wealth out of investments designed to generate wealth and into designer shoes, or new video games and other things which have little or no value. The companies make some profit off of it, so the wealth doesnt disappear entierly. But ultimately it does far more harm than good.
People buying lots of junk is not a healthy economy. People investing in companies and using a small portion of wealth generated to buy some luxury things is fine however. Thats why when the wealthy have a lot of money, at least in a healthy society, it generates the most wealth and indirectly creates the most prosperity for the people (who tend to share in the profit from these ventures via their 401K or even as an employee by it producing more jobs).
People buying "junk" is bad for the economy but people buying "luxury things" is fine? It's a free market, so none of it is "junk", it all has the value the the market participates have placed on it. It's all worth exactly what the market says it's worth. But that value, that price discovery, happens best when there are more buyers and more sellers. Not all of the UBI recipients will spend the money. Many will use it to get an education, start a small business, etc. The ones who make the right decisions will do better. That's how markets work.