MCViewPoint

Opinion from a Libertarian ViewPoint

Posts Tagged ‘Inflation Tax’

On Wealth Inequality, the Left Has a Point

Posted by M. C. on June 17, 2024

by Thomas Eddlem

Of course, the demagogic, corporate-owned left will tell us that the solution to the oppression of the poor working man is to oppress the rich man as well. “Tax the rich” is the slogan of the corporate-owned left. It’s like observing that the abusive boyfriend of a woman living on the right side of the street gives his girlfriend a black eye every week from abuse, and the single mom on the left side of the street is free from that abuse, and concluding that the only “fair” solution is to get that abusive boyfriend to blacken the eye of the woman across the street every week as well.

“…when they get the money they can and will loan it directly to the stock gamblers, to be used to exploit the people.”

The author doesn’t state the mechanism of inflation clearly enough. Printing of “fiat” (not backed by a valuable commodity such as gold) money by the federal reserve.

https://libertarianinstitute.org/articles/on-wealth-inequality-the-left-has-a-point/

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The federal government has been waging a war against the middle class and working poor since at least 1970. Wealth inequality has steadily increased since the early 1970s, and it’s not a coincidence. It’s a result of a series of policies. The government wants the masses of American working people broke, propertyless, and dependent upon elected officials for the crumbs they give back as handouts from taxes taken.

The most insidious attack on working people has been inflation, which really took off when the federal government decoupled the dollar from gold in 1971.

The inflation tax is the most regressive tax that currently exists in federal policy.

Inflation always taxes wages twice, once when the labor is performed and the worker is awaiting payment, and again when the wages are deposited into the worker’s checking account. But inflation leaves the rich man’s yacht untaxed.

No level of inflation, no matter how high, can ever take one cent of value away from a yacht. A yacht is always going to be a yacht, no matter what the value of money is.

Inflation taxes the poor man’s rent he advances to his landlord, but leaves private jets and vacation homes untaxed.

Want to know where this inflation tax goes? The stolen value of the inflation tax doesn’t just vanish out of thin air.

Some of it goes to the government; economists even have a name for the benefit government draws from the inflation tax. It’s called “seigniorage.”

Rich people generally don’t pay the inflation tax, and many of them benefit from it. Let’s say you’re a billionaire real estate mogul, not unlike Donald Trump, with a net-worth of $1 billion. You buy houses and real estate, and when you get your 20% equity, you pull that equity out and invest it into another real estate holding. So you have properties worth $5 billion, net assets of $1 billion, and (with only 20% equity in your properties) you also have $4 billion in mortgage debt.

4% inflation lowers the value of the mortgage debt you owe, since with CPI inflation you’re just going to raise the rent 4% next year. Inflation created by the Federal Reserve Bank becomes a gift of $160 million annually to your net worth ($4 billion x 0.04).

Every year.

And it enriches them more if inflation exceeds 4%, as it has in recent years.

If the CPI is 10% (as it nearly was in 2022), inflation alone adds 40% ($400 million) to this real estate mogul’s net worth. That doesn’t count the decrease in the nominal debt paid off by the real estate mogul’s tenants.

And this assumes the value of his property holdings is only increasing at the rate of CPI inflation, which it’s vastly exceeding, thanks to Federal Reserve Bank interest rate manipulation and federal housing subsidies and incentives.

Inflation enriches the real estate mogul with a boatload of mortgages that are now easier to pay off. It also benefits the hedge fund speculator and the banker, who are in the very businesses of being in debt.

In other words, the inflation tax makes the value of money flow directly from the wallets of wage-earners to the vaults of rich people who work with debt.

As long as the working man holds money in his possession, whether in the form of credit to his employer for his labor, in his pocket, or in his checking account, inflation taxes him. Only when the money is finally no longer due to him does the inflation tax end.

See the rest here

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Peter Schiff Breaks Down the Inflation Tax – LewRockwell

Posted by M. C. on August 13, 2021

As Peter pointed out, money creation itself is inflation. Rising prices are a symptom.

The more money there is, the more expensive everything is, because each unit of money is diminished as the quantity of money is increased. So, as you have more dollars, each dollar is worth less and now you need more of them to buy stuff.”

https://www.lewrockwell.com/2021/08/no_author/peter-schiff-breaks-down-the-inflation-tax/

Peter Schiff recently appeared on the Matt Walsh podcast. During the interview, he broke down exactly how the Federal Reserve and the US government team up to hit you with an inflation tax.

Matt said upfront that culture and social issues are more in his wheelhouse than economics. But like pretty much everybody, he sees prices rising with his own two eyes. He said he went shopping with his wife recently and “had one heart attack after another looking at how expensive everything was.” Peter said, “You ain’t seen nothing yet.”

Prices are just starting to go up. So, they’re going to go a lot higher. And I think even the acceleration is going to pick up, so, you’re going to see bigger gains.”

Peter said the real question is why didn’t this happen sooner? Why weren’t prices moving up faster over the last few years?

The Federal Reserve has been creating a lot of inflation. That’s been their monetary policy. That’s how they responded to the busting of the dot-com bubble, and then the housing bubble, and then COVID – they just printed a lot of money.”

As Peter pointed out, money creation itself is inflation. Rising prices are a symptom.

The more money there is, the more expensive everything is, because each unit of money is diminished as the quantity of money is increased. So, as you have more dollars, each dollar is worth less and now you need more of them to buy stuff.”

Peter said the reason we didn’t see spiking prices early on was a lot of those dollars ended up going into financial assets.

That was the way they were kind of entering into the economy and the way the Fed was administering this monetary policy. And so, you saw big increases in stock prices or real estate prices. All of those price gains were being fueled by inflation. But now, you’re finally starting to see that inflation now showing up in the consumer goods prices.”

This is particularly a problem in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic.

What COVID did was it reduced the supply of goods, because a lot of people who used to work stopped working, and so they were no longer helping to produce goods and services that we all buy, because they weren’t working anymore. So, the economy, not only in the US but around the world, became less productive, so that we weren’t making as much stuff. The proper response for the Fed would have been to withdraw money from the economy — take money away so that the money supply was going down with the supply of goods and services, and that would have kind of kept prices in check. But instead, the Fed did the opposite. The Fed decided to print a bunch of money and mail it out to the people who were no longer working.”

In fact, a lot of people got more money not working than they earned at their job. But they weren’t producing anything.

So, we decreased the supply of goods and services to buy while simultaneously increasing the amount of money in circulation to buy them. So, it’s a perfect storm for prices. And the government is going to throw fuel on the fire with this infrastructure program and all this other economic stimulus that is really just inflation because it’s all paid for by the Fed printing money.”

Peter reminds us that every time the government spends money, it’s a tax – whether it raises taxes or not.

Whether they want to acknowledge it as a tax or not, the cost of government is what it spends, not what it collects in taxes — what it spends. So, every dollar of federal spending has to be paid for. And the way you pay for the spending that is financed when the Fed prints money to buy government debt – we pay for that with higher prices. So, what you’re experiencing every time you go and buy something, and the price is much higher than what you remember, that increase is really a tax. That is what all the government spending is costing you. It’s costing those higher prices. And since government spending is going to go way up from here, the inflation tax to pay for it is also going to go way up.”

So, what is the path out?

Well, we have to cut government spending, and then the Fed won’t be printing as much money to finance all the debt.”

But of course, there is no indication that will happen any time soon.

We’re going to keep printing money. We’re going to keep borrowing and spending money. And so, we’re going to keep paying for all that through inflation, which means the price of everything we buy is going to go up.”

In this interview, Peter also talked about the future trajectory of the economy, and he delves into Bitcoin.

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