This guy is a Harvard economist. Does he belong to the
flat earth society as well as the flat tax society?
  As China illustrates opening markets far from
solving the inequality of wealth distribution in China
has made it much worse, so much according to the
article that inequality is greater in China than the
US.
  How on earth is the flat tax supposed to help reduce
income inequality? It does the opposite by doing away
with a progressive tax system..
   The URL is...
http://commentisfree.guardian.co.uk/kenneth_rogoff/2007/11/to_have_and_to_have_not.html

Cheers, Ken Hanly


To have and to have not
Fundamental tax reforms and open markets are needed to
balance the global distribution of wealth. It doesn't
look likely in our lifetime.
Kenneth Rogoff

Lately, I have been trying to explain to my
11-year-old son Gabriel the astronomical differences
between people's income.

Microsoft founder Bill Gates first penetrated
Gabriel's consciousness a couple of years ago, when
his father served as a warm-up act to Gates at a large
conference sponsored by the Danish government. Ever
since, Gabriel has been fascinated by the seemingly
infinite possibilities of having $60bn.

For example, whenever I tell Gabriel that something is
unbelievably valuable (even, say, a great painting in
a museum), he invariably says, "But Bill Gates could
buy it, right?" Yes, Gates could buy the whole museum.
But then he would just turn around and give it back so
everyone else can see it, so there is no point.
Gabriel is not entirely convinced.

Gabriel has decided that if he can't become a
professional basketball player when he grows up, then
he'd like to buy a team. As an economics professor, I
cannot help but ask him if he knows that it costs
$300-500m to buy a National Basketball Association
team. "But Bill Gates could do it. He could buy all
the teams in the league, right?" Yes, I say. But if
Bill Gates were to own the entire NBA, how would he
decide which team to root for? Gabriel concedes the
point, but I can tell that again he is not convinced.

Gates is not the only one who can easily buy teams and
paintings. The latest Forbes list of America's
wealthiest individuals showed that last year's highest
nine earners, whose ranks include New York City's
mayor, Michael Bloomberg, managed to increase their
wealth by $5-9bn last year. Yes, that is just the
annual increase in their wealth. Collectively, their
$55bn in earnings outstripped the entire national
income of more than 100 countries.

To put these astronomical numbers in perspective, I
had Gabriel try to confirm that to be among the top
nine earners in the US, you had to pull in at least
$150 per second, including time spent eating and
sleeping. That is $9,000 per minute, or $540,000 per
hour.

How much do America's highest income earners make
compared to the world's billion poorest individuals?
Well, if the top nine donated their earnings, it would
be the equivalent of about three months' income for
the bottom billion. (Gabriel knows, of course, that
Bill Gates and Warren Buffet have donated tens of
billions already.)

As for the other nine months, given that the US
accounts for only 25% of world income, it is a fair
guess that there are some very wealthy individuals
elsewhere who might be able to kick in. (Mexican
telephone magnate Carlos Slim, for example, is a close
competitor to Gates for the title of the world's
richest man.)

Mind you, the idea that the ultra-rich could easily
solve poverty is stupefyingly naive. Most serious
academic research strongly supports the view that rich
countries can best help poor regions like Africa by
opening their markets, and by providing assistance in
building physical and institutional infrastructures.

The greatest successes in fighting global poverty have
come from China and India, two countries that have
largely pulled themselves up by their own bootstraps.
But this seems too complicated to explain to Gabriel
just yet. So I retreat to the simplistic rock star/UN
view of how great it would be if we could give more
money.

Are massive income and wealth differences an
inevitable outcome of fast growth? By and large, the
answer from history is "yes". China, whose growth
performance since 1970 has now broken every record, is
well on its way to having the world's most unequal
income distribution. Indeed, China has passed the US
and is nearing Latin American levels of inequality.

Policy solutions are not easy. Many super-earners are
also super-creative and bring enormous value. Places
like the UK actively court wealthy foreign nationals
through extraordinary preferential treatment of their
investment income. The ultra-rich are an ultra-mobile
group, too. If you are earning $540,000 an hour, it
does not take too long to save up to buy an apartment,
even in London.

Anyway, there are limits to how much tax pressure the
political system can apply to the ultra-rich. Consider
that any of the top nine American earners make more in
two days than leading US presidential candidate
Hillary Clinton raises for her campaign in a good
quarter of the year.

Rather than punitively taxing wealth, globalisation
strengthens the case for shifting to a flat tax on
income (or better yet consumption) with a moderately
high exemption. Aside from the usual efficiency
arguments, it is just going to become increasingly
difficult and costly to maintain complex and
idiosyncratic national tax arrangements.

Unfortunately, movements towards fundamental tax
reform are on the back burner in most countries. One
can only hope that our children's generation will grow
up to live in a world that does a better job of
balancing efficiency and equity than we do. Gabriel
says he is going to think about it.





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