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  1. Some more good ideas here. The financial bubble has certainly starved the real economy of investment.

    Reviving the ban on stock buybacks would be another simple step to reverse financialisation.

    If we look beyond tax policy, we should consider some deeper causes also.

    Replacing sound money with the mass printing of paper currency was the major cause of the bubble. This created the ZIRP loans for companies (a wealth transfer), and simply speculating on stocks and real estate was easy money (lower risk than building a factory).

    ‘Globalisation’ is also a key part of this. There IS still investment in production, but it is mostly in sweatshops. The export of capital by transnational financiers is both the dominant part of the largest capitalist economies, and the power centre of the world capitalist system.

    When Fred Hirsch and Paul Volker were calling for “controlled disintegration in the world economy” and “setting bounds to arbitrary national action”, they were describing the attempt to trap countries inside ‘globalist’ treaties — so that countries cannot prevent production being sent to the sweatshops, and must abolish laws maintaining domestic ownership of resources and industries.

    1. I agree with most of what you say here but…

      > There IS still investment in production, but it is mostly in sweatshops.

      My understanding is that it’s mostly local entrepreneurs and business banks who do the investing. Transnational corporations then get them into a bidding war with each other and take the lowest bid, regardless of how the bidder cut costs, ie by imposing exploitative conditions on workers). Having outsourced the true costs of production to locals, corporations can then move production to any factory in any country to save money, without losing any investment in production.

      1. @Danyl:
        That’s right, they are contractors. Some of that money might come from transnational lenders, but it could also be from local banks.

        So if you are concerned about local production, you have to somehow make that trade unprofitable (returning to tarriffs and import controls, state investment etc.)

  2. IMO removing deductability of expenses and paying tax on the gross just would not work for businesses! I can never see this being implemented as it just would not be viable for many businesses to continue to operate. The above mentioned “problem” plus not allowing for losses and a 10% tax on asset disposal helps whom? Not those businesses that shut or struggle on or their customers that lose choice due to failed/ reduced scope of businesses/face higher prices due to businesses needing to stay viable. This would only help the government assuming that it was sustainable in producing higher revenue. Perhaps your idea is that the government then redistributes the added revenue. IMO it is more likely to reduce the pie and shrink the middle class. I’m retired now and apart from investments in some businesses such measures would have little effect on me personally however I dislike these proposals as my view is they would be counter productive. Making the middle class poorer doesn’t help the have nots or encourage upward mobility.

    1. Hi Trev, A key point I made, using data, is that the middle class are the biggest losers in the current neo-liberal economic model. So when you say it wouldn’t work you fail to see the disaster around you. You are teh frog in the pot of water on the stove. These ideas do work because they work within the current system and are just significant amendments to many of the main principles that are still remain in place.
      Technically it is neither a left wing or right wing idea or change. But as these changes attack tax avoidance, and they will impact the wealthiest (small business will do quite well with these changes) it will be viewed as left wing. I’m fine with that as you have to be a horrible horrible insensitive person to be right wing at the moment. Things are working so badly for the middle class under the current system you have to be ill-informed, or indoctrinated, or a bit dim if you back the current National/Act economic framework.

  3. In many respects I would say that most people would see a tax on realised gains as a necessary evil whereas they may view a tax on accrued gains as a punishment. It is totally the wrong perspective to have, as a tax on accrued gains allows the money to flow more freely and protects economies against unnecessary periods of recession.

    1. Hi Daniel Lang, you seem to miss the point, with data, that the current system is working extremely badly for most people (especially the middle class) . So your talk about accruals being protection from recessions is ???? not making sense.
      There shouldn’t be a difference between an accrued gain and a realised gain Because both are real assets on which borrowing can occur so they are both gained. The risk with a distinction (there is a real one for accounting purposes but tax doesn’t have to follow that) is that it will be used for tax avoidance.

  4. Luxon will borrow $2bn give tax cuts to rich, cut back health, education and police budgets, increase GST, invite property speculators in to run NZ housing, don’t add to social housing stock for 30 years. This is the weakest Tory party ever seen in Aotearoa.

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