Originally posted by ricketyclik
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Like, imagine that 100 years ago David's great-grandfather earned one million dollars and decided to save all of it, and we had had an earned income tax of 10%. That one million would turn into 900k. Given identical proportions of asset purchases, that set of assets will always be worth only 90% of the value of the same set of assets purchased with a full million dollars. If the 900k were invested in a bank account at 5% interest for 100 years, and then David decided to use the money for either personal consumption or just to reinvest, he will have $118.3 million. But this is exactly 90% of what someone who invested $1 million would have ($131.5 million). And if he reinvests it and his great-grandson withdraws it, it will still be only 90% of what the $1 million investment would have been.
(Math types call this property 'linearity', btw.)
Now, if you're concerned about intergenerational inheritance of wealth, advocate an estate tax, sure. But the CG tax is just distortionary and suck.
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