Chippy_boy
Well-Known Member
Please don't take this as just being argumentative, because I hear you and agree with quite a bit of it. But I'll focus on the bits I don't agree with, or are worth me commenting on.I think the flaw in this thinking is if you look at the flow of wealth over the last 30/40 years the trajectory is such that squeezing the middle classes is at very best a temporary band aid. It might feel good for a while that they are taking the kind of medicine the less well off have had to take, it might also feel good that we are seemingly taking action to fix things. Except it won't address the fundamental issue we have which is massive outflows of wealth to a tiny percentage of the population and that the version of capitalism we've ended up with is focused on large scale wealth extraction and hoarding by a tiny group at the expense of the vast majority. When the post war social consensus broke down this is what replaced it. The argument that their existing taxes pay for a significant proportion of the state is irrelevant because (a) they often make their fortunes by extracting wealth from states in the first place (b) things are continuing to get worse for the vast majority of people anyway.
If we cannot stop rising inequality and decelerate the flow of wealth to the super rich then talk of taking the medicine sounds reasonable but is futile. The poor and middle income 'classes' cannot fix this problem on their own, at least not through shouldering more burden.
The globalisation and financialisation of the economy seems to make fixing this problem head spinningly hard. If I had the answers I wouldn't be sat on here pontificating. But we'd be better devoting our efforts to working that out than donning financial sack cloth and ashes in the hope it provides a miracle that isn't going to come.
I am truly glad for your sister and you that she has had access to the pioneering treatment. Hopefully, as is often the case with advancements, the costs of such treatment can be reduced to increase access to others too. At one level £500k is a very big number, but another way of looking at it is it takes Jeff Bezo about 30-40 seconds to increase his wealth by that amount. Does taking all of Jeffrey's money off him magically solve the problem? Of course not, but it does highlight the insanity of the system we are trying to fix.
Even if we could fix it temporarily by ordinary folk taking yet another hair cut, what happens when the super rich come back for more?
First, I think it's a sweeping (and IMO wrong) generalization that the super rich extract money from the state in the first place. I don't know anyone in the UK who is super rich, and the only one I do know made his money fair and square. Left Texas Instruments, set up his own software company and made himself hundreds of millions of dollars. He didn't steal it off anyone, and certainly not off the state. It was a reflection of the value of the company, which was freely invested in by the likes of you and me, and the institutional investors. In building his company, he paid VAST amounts of tax, and hired a lot of people - me included - and had 6,000 people on the payroll, all of whom were paid handsomely, and all of whom also paid a lot of tax. What is remotely wrong with this? I think this route to being a billionaire is the norm, not the exception.
Second, I was not suggesting that ONLY the "poor and middle income 'classes'" should bear the burden of fixing society's issues/financial woes. Merely that it is not feasible for that group to be excluded from any pain. Trying to tax only those not in that group, won't work.
Finally, the disparity between rich and poor. I can see that in an ideal world, the gap seems ludicrously large. But I think it's a facet of successful capitalist economies. The motivation to get rich is what drives people - like my former boss - to risk everything, and to do so many times over. I think efforts to curtail this - unless globally coordinated, and that's not happening in any relevant timescale - will just cause the uber rich to make their money elsewhere. It is sad IMO that Elon Musk, Jeff Bezos, Bill Gates, Warren Buffet, Mark Zuckerberg, Larry Page, Larry Ellison etc etc - I could go on - are not English and not living in England. There's a reason they are all in the US and not here. And making "here' even less attractive would only make things worse, not better.
Footnote: I don't see any complaints about how much we had to pay KDB or Haaland or anyone else. Absolutely ludicrous differential between their pay and that of either the tea lady, or even a 3rd division player. But we accept that if you want the best, you have to pay them. Same in any business.
