False Narrative

Well, the liberal talking point of the day seems to be the cheering that took place last night during the Republican debate. According to the liberal narrative, the crowd erupted in applause when it was suggested that a poor planning 30-something might be left to die for want of insurance. The liberal outrage was summed up by 12Bar earlier:

The implications of letting uninsured people die is broad. Why even get the fire department out there to pry them out their wrecked cars if they’re uninsured. Just tow the whole thing, wreck and victims to the wrecking yard where we don’t have to hear them scream. And people applaud for this?


Well no, they don’t. You guys should really watch that portion of the debate again. There was no audience cheer in support of the idea of letting the uninsured die This is just an invented talking point. In fact, the notion was explicitly rejected by Paul, to the sound of applause.

The initial cheer came when Blitzer asked “Who pays?” and Paul responded “That’s what freedom is all about, taking your own risks. This whole idea that you have to prepare and take care of everybody…” (Applause)

Note that at this point the notion that anyone might die had not yet been raised. The question had to do with who pays the bill for medical treatment. Only after the applauding had susided did Blitzer ask “But Congressman, are you saying that society should just let him die?”

Paul then explicitly rejected this notion, saying “No. I practiced medicine before we had Medicaid, in the early 1960s, when I got out of medical school. I practiced at Santa Rosa Hospital in San Antonio, and the churches took care of them. We never turned anybody away from the hospitals.” The corwd then erupted into applause again.

Watch the exchange and see if this isn’t so. Today’s liberal talking point is based on a complete misrepresentation of what happened. The applause was not for the idea of letting someone die. It was for the notion that people ought to be responsible for themselves.

The horror!

A Modest Corporate Tax Rate Proposal

I pose that corporate tax rates should be made rational and competitive, and I think the 28-29% area is both, provided we close most yawning gaps. 

See

 http://www.smbiz.com/sbrl001.html#ci

 and note that the rate table is irrational: the top rate, 39%, falls on entities making between $100K and $335K and then drops off! I pick the 28-29% level for a top corporate tax for competitiveness. 

See:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tax_rates_around_the_world

 You will point out that competitor nations have other taxes, and I will respond that due to our federal system we do too.

I would abolish CG preferential treatment if we had a flat tax rate with a high standard deduction, but if we retain a progressive structure then sales of appreciated assets place a punishing high tax on income, which spread over the life of the asset, would have been taxed at a conceivably much lower lower rate.  Take your sale of non-homestead real property, owned for 30 years. It has appreciated five times over. If you are normally in a 15% bracket this appreciation would put you in the 35% bracket for the current year, thus punishing you for having kept the property, because if you could have sold it off piecemeal over the years you would have been taxed at the lower rate. However, I favor a method that would allow us to abolish CG preference because I favor a flatter structure.

I would toy with a very high standard deduction and no itemization as a starting place.  That allows for much flatter rates and simpler personal returns. For example:The last time I ran the numbers, a standard deduction of $20K for a single person, $40K for a couple, plus $10K for the first dependent, coupled with a 33 1/3% flat tax above that, and a 40% rate on incomes over $250K for an individual, $500K for a married couple, plus $10K for the first dependent produces more revenue, but hits higher on the income scale than our current system. CG rates could be the lower of the only two brackets, 33 1/3%. I would consider stretching the CG holding period to three years.

Without itemization, personal tax issues are simplified. I would treat dividends and interest the same as earned income and I would ignore the ruckus about double taxation of corporations. I would call double taxation a cost of obtaining the liability shield for the investors.

However, I would gradually move away from reliance upon the personal income tax toward a small transaction tax on the widest base of transactions, like the automated payment transaction tax for which great claims have been made. 

See:

 http://www.apttax.com/execsummary.php

Less radical, but working along the same principal of lower tax on a broader base, we see Simon Johnson’s proposals. Jonson is both a brilliant economist and an expert in banking and finance. 

http://economix.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/07/21/could-tax-reform-make-the-financial-system-safer/ 

and download from this link:http://www.iie.com/publications/interviews/pp20110727johnson.pdf

I would add in high “sin” taxes, like those on tobacco and alcohol, but also upon carbon based fuels and decriminalized MJ. I would rank order the carbon tax based on the dirtiness of the fuel – coal would be much more heavily taxed than NG. In fact, I might not tax NG at all if it would hasten the end of coal.

As to the expenditure side: For me, the goal is broadly Keynesian but narrowly Friedmanesque, and decidedly Smithian. We should aim to balance the budget over the business cycle in a way that we are in surplus during most times and deficit only during bad times, automatically – rather than in deficit all the time, which is the unfortunate political reality. Monetarily we should not be flooding the world with created funds and low interest when there is an excess of accumulated capital, but only when there is a shortage of accumulated capital. Our Fed does have the unique dual legal and formal obligation to fight both inflation and unemployment, so my desired outcome cannot be, in this respect.

 As to production and trade:I would also like to see an industrial policy that fostered innovation and rewarded it.  For example, that Silicon Valley outfit that invented the most recent advance in led bulbs should be getting encouraged to keep the new jobs to be created in the USA.  If Austin can lure a Samsung factory, someone can lure a light bulb factory.  I am not suggesting a federal policy on the front end, but I would listen to suggestions along that line. This would also lead to tariff protections for fledgling industries, the exceptional circumstance in which Adam Smith supported restrictions on free trade.

Beyond Smith, however, I would attempt to make the UN’s International Labor Organization rules applicable to the World Trade Organization. As it stands, only the “no slavery” rule applies at WTO.ILO insists that nations have minimum wage and maximum hours laws enforced, child labor laws enforced, and freedom of association for the purpose of collective bargaining. WTO ignores these rules and thus can sanction all western nations for placing tariffs against nations like China where there is no collective bargaining. There is reason to believe that all the western nations plus some others, like Japan, could force this upon WTO, or failing that, dissolve WTO. There is no way we can talk about fair trade without this kind of change, because WTO does not recognize these basic principles.

I have posted piecemeal some of these ideas at PL, but I thought doing it here with some links would be a nice kickoff to conversation.

Welcome from lmsinca

Hi all

Lo and behold Kevin already had a blog up and running that we could all share, which saved me a lot of work. But this won’t be Kevin’s blog or my blog, it belongs to all of us. I’m hoping most of you will participate not only in commenting but in creating your own posts or diaries that the rest of us will comment on. I’m also hoping for an exchange of ideas, free of death threats and infantile name calling, if I can be blunt. I love a good argument and a vigorous defense of ideas and positions but sometimes the extra noise and insults get in the way of the debate. One thing I’d hate to see though is for this place turn into an echo chamber or a sterile environment that loses all personality. This is my vision and mine alone, you may have different ideas, as a matter of fact you probably do. And don’t forget the humor please.

There is a lot going on right now in the world and we’ll hopefully display many different view points and an exchange of ideas, not to mention a commenting system that’s a little more stable. I hope you’ll still participate at the Plumline and bring lots of links and commentary from other blogs and news sources here so we can discuss them. I don’t think we should link our little slice of the blogosphere elsewhere though until we decide together how open we want to be to strangers.

I haven’t had a chance to explore the site very thoroughly yet so we’ll have to do it together. You should probably direct technical questions to Kevin, lol. If you figure something out that will make this place more interesting or inviting try it out and share it with us. Have at it people.

Hire the Hackers

What we can do with our own blog . . .

For example, I’m embedding a video on cyber security (it is interesting, though). As a bonus, the guy gets in a couple of good shots at Fox. It also represents a problem I’ve had with business and government response to technological innovation since I was a kid. Old school people in all walks seem to think they are going to out-think, outsmart, and out-maneuver technology, when embracing it would work much better. Which he touches on . . .

http://video.ted.com/assets/player/swf/EmbedPlayer.swf


Update: I’m also going to try and embed a song I wrote, just for the sake of expanding my knowledge:

http://s2.wp.com/wp-content/plugins/audio-player/player.swf?m=1263012760g

The Historic Founding of Our Fine Blog

A couple of things: right now, the blog is public and listed on search engines. Do we want to let anybody benefit from our wisdom, or make it private?

I’m making both of you admins, so you can do anything to the blog and change any setting. I’m thinking all the Founding Fathers and Mothers of this blog ought to be able to edit anything–change the description, the design, etc. If someone ever wants to set up a way to earn money (a little premature for that, I’ve had blogs with moderate traffic for years, before abandoning them, and they never earned a penny, but you never know). Point being, we are all admins, and if someone wants to edit the look or change it so all comments are moderated, they can. I expect our Founding Mothers and Fathers to be judicious and fair. 🙂


Update (see picture): Just keep in mind, that you’re a little bit country, and I’m a little bit rock ‘n’ roll. Or vice-versa.

Welcome to All Things in Moderation

The goal is thoughtful discussion. I think rules can be overdone, but I suggest one: always use the person’s name, or handle, when referring to them, either directly or indirectly. That way, name calling is much more difficult.

For example, if I might feel like calling someone a hippy, but instead, I must call them Margaret, it helps inform the tone. That’s what I’m thinking.

We’re just starting this. How we decide to allow comments (no anonymous comments) and what kind of moderation we decide to allow or process comments (from those not participating in the actual blog) have not yet been decided. This is the most basic template in Blogger (Blogspot) and we may end up adjust graphics, etc, over time.

For those of us blogging, this format does offer numerous advantages. One, it works for everybody, pretty much. Some places do block blogger and blogspot (even our system has, in the past, but complaints from schools ended up forcing them to relent, because it blocked so many education and technology bloggers). However, if that happens, we can pony up a minor amount for a custom URL, and that should solve that problem.

Two, we can more easily embed links and images. It makes sharing certain things easier, which is nice. Also, we have formatting options, so we can truly format and underline until our hearts are content.

Three, having a main post with comments can help keep discussions organized. I’m sure there are others.

Finally, all members founding members of the blog will be given full administration privileges.

Let the discussion commence!