Would you propose raising the tax on capital gains for those with a lower income or lowering the tax on those with a higher income in order to equalize treatment of capital gains?
I can see taxation of financial transactions putting a serious hindrance to investment in fresh IPOs of startup companies that have grown beyond "Main Street." I can also see it reducing the number, scale, & frequency of transactions; in general making the market postured towards less risk-taking, possibly retarding overall economic growth. I am not an expert on the financial system, but I can see a financial transactions tax not achieving the desired results as it slows the exchange of goods & commodities and thus revenue and capital gains.
Bull. The financial sector is completely out of whack with the rest of the global economy.
e.g.
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(From here)
Traders are just pushing money around doing make-work and patting themselves on the back for achieving... nothing
Your response seems fair with regards to "general financial" transactions. My response was to a discussion of capital gains and my layman's understanding of capital gains.
Also, why is my opinion bull? Did I claim it as fact? It is my conjecture at a possible side effect of increasing taxation on capital gains.
You've lost me, Dex1. What is "a failure to appreciate the mechanics of capitalism (to include greed) and attempt to force a desired end-state through utilization of other methods," and how does that answer my question of "what does it mean for capitalism to work?" I'm not trying to be pedantic here. I just don't want to misread between the lines and attribute a view to you that you don't hold.
I did not respond to the question of "What does it mean for capitalism to work?" I responded to the other two questions without providing a definition of "capitalism working."
I will try to provide examples of capitalism working to me.
Richard BransonElon MuskSteve JobsThese individuals have built successful, society changing companies, and transformed existing industries when they enter them. But maybe that is not what you mean?
I mean, you mention the rise of monopoly power and unions as things that happen in a capitalist system, but I don't think that's what you're saying is the defining feature of 'capitalism working,' especially since you explicitly said they were examples. (As a side note, any chance I can get a source for the claim that monopolies will naturally break up, given enough time?)
I can provide
examples were I think de facto monopolies are broken up naturally given time. For example, in the mid-90s, Microsoft seemed to have a de facto monopoly, but today other options are gaining significant market share in various areas and some of them with much less in the way of resources than Microsoft.
Another example is the attempt by the government to maintain competition in the space launch market actually led to the merger of the two companies (Boeing's & Lockheed's Launch systems merge to form ULA) creating a monopoly. This monopoly is being targeted by at least an entrepreneur interested in lowering launch cost (SpaceX).
I suppose my claim that monopolies naturally break up is poorly written. It may have been better of me to say "given time, a monopoly will be broken."
Actually, hell, I'll take a shot at misreading between the lines. Please correct me when I'm wrong here. It seems to me that what you (and Vik) are saying is that, regardless of what it means specifically for capitalism to work, capitalism working necessarily includes higher risk and higher reward. Is that at all accurate?
I can not speak for Vik, only myself.
Capitalism, raw capitalism, allows for people to take high risk and be highly rewarded. By placing security nets (bail outs) the risk is lowered / shared by others. It is a trait of it, not necessarily whether it is working or not. It is not working if higher reward does not have higher risk or if low risk allows for a higher reward than a higher risk activity.