I already did, I said I wouldn’t oppose China changing their taxation rate. My point is that your issues with China are arbitrary and constantly shifting. It’s you that won’t answer my questions.
Probably, but it would have tradeoffs, including lower rates of socialization of production due to restricting the flow of capital in underdeveloped industries. I already said I wouldn’t oppose China changing the taxation rate, especially as production does continue to socialize. You’ve repeatedly dodged my questions, though, which is extremely dishonest and clear evidence of bad-faith.
No matter what taxation rate China picks, the general strategy of marketization for competitive, small and medium firms as a method of socializing production persists, and inevitably results in capitalists with a larger degree of wealth. When you pick an arbitrary level to be satisfied with, you are making the judgment that the present level of taxation is insufficient. This requires concrete reasoning, reasoning you have not provided, and even said doesn’t actually matter.
The idea that increased taxation for the mega wealthy would be bad for the economy is something those liberals waiting for free market China actually say too, in a funny twist.
I was just using billionaire as a shorthand to the mega wealthy, meaning those who have ridiculously more wealth than the average person. It’s not actually strictly that number that I care about, it’s just easier to discuss.
The taxation rate (as in, allowing those mega wealthy to exist) is bad imo because there’s no sensible reason one in vidual needs to hoard that amount of wealth. And it’s through the exploitation of the workers. After a billion (or other ridiculously high amount, you can pick another) you could just distribute the extra wealth to the workers in higher wages. So what would be a good taxation rate after that set amount (whatever we decide on)? 100%.
So, to conclude, you do disagree with the socialist market economy of China, and instead would prefer a Gang of Four style economy based on equal poverty, and a rejection of Marxism in favor of dogmatic collectivization. You cannot have the socialist market economy without capitalists and therefore the creation of wealthy individuals, and without the socialist market economy China would be less developed and their working classes would be behind where they presently are. China already taxes, and already directs this towards social services and infrastructure.
I disagree with allowing billionaires to exist, since as we concluded, they’re not even necessary for the current Chinese strategy and imo that wealth belongs to the workers.
You disagree with capitalists, not billionaires. We already discussed how you feel that “billionaires” are arbitrary, and that your issue is with the “mega-wealthy,” ie capitalists. Capitalists are necessary for the socialist market economy, with privatization of small industries to accelerate socialization comes capitalists, and with capitalists come the comparatively wealthy. This is the tradeoff of the socialist market economy.
The Gang of Four preceded Deng Xiaoping and Reform & Opening Up. They tried to dogmatically collectivize as much as possible, regardless of the level of development, feeling that it was better to be poor in a more equal society than to accept some degree of inequality in favor of rapid development uplifting everyone.
I disagree wirh capitalists, especially ones that amass inordinate amount, including billionaires. I’m more fine with those having less wealth but a billion gets into ridiculous territory. You gotta set a cap somewhere.
There’s some inequality and there’s some being dirt poor while others have billions. That’s just too much for me tbh. Especially since it’s not necessary for the current strategy to allow that amount of wealth.
You’re not going to answer my question, are you?
I already did, I said I wouldn’t oppose China changing their taxation rate. My point is that your issues with China are arbitrary and constantly shifting. It’s you that won’t answer my questions.
With the taxation rate do you mean taxing it so that billionaires wouldn’t exist? Would that allow the current Chinese strategy to still work?
Probably, but it would have tradeoffs, including lower rates of socialization of production due to restricting the flow of capital in underdeveloped industries. I already said I wouldn’t oppose China changing the taxation rate, especially as production does continue to socialize. You’ve repeatedly dodged my questions, though, which is extremely dishonest and clear evidence of bad-faith.
No matter what taxation rate China picks, the general strategy of marketization for competitive, small and medium firms as a method of socializing production persists, and inevitably results in capitalists with a larger degree of wealth. When you pick an arbitrary level to be satisfied with, you are making the judgment that the present level of taxation is insufficient. This requires concrete reasoning, reasoning you have not provided, and even said doesn’t actually matter.
Why is China’s current taxation rate bad?
What would be a good taxation rate, and why?
Stop dodging.
The idea that increased taxation for the mega wealthy would be bad for the economy is something those liberals waiting for free market China actually say too, in a funny twist.
I was just using billionaire as a shorthand to the mega wealthy, meaning those who have ridiculously more wealth than the average person. It’s not actually strictly that number that I care about, it’s just easier to discuss.
The taxation rate (as in, allowing those mega wealthy to exist) is bad imo because there’s no sensible reason one in vidual needs to hoard that amount of wealth. And it’s through the exploitation of the workers. After a billion (or other ridiculously high amount, you can pick another) you could just distribute the extra wealth to the workers in higher wages. So what would be a good taxation rate after that set amount (whatever we decide on)? 100%.
I hope that answers your questions
So, to conclude, you do disagree with the socialist market economy of China, and instead would prefer a Gang of Four style economy based on equal poverty, and a rejection of Marxism in favor of dogmatic collectivization. You cannot have the socialist market economy without capitalists and therefore the creation of wealthy individuals, and without the socialist market economy China would be less developed and their working classes would be behind where they presently are. China already taxes, and already directs this towards social services and infrastructure.
I disagree with allowing billionaires to exist, since as we concluded, they’re not even necessary for the current Chinese strategy and imo that wealth belongs to the workers.
I don’t know the Gang of Four thing is.
You disagree with capitalists, not billionaires. We already discussed how you feel that “billionaires” are arbitrary, and that your issue is with the “mega-wealthy,” ie capitalists. Capitalists are necessary for the socialist market economy, with privatization of small industries to accelerate socialization comes capitalists, and with capitalists come the comparatively wealthy. This is the tradeoff of the socialist market economy.
The Gang of Four preceded Deng Xiaoping and Reform & Opening Up. They tried to dogmatically collectivize as much as possible, regardless of the level of development, feeling that it was better to be poor in a more equal society than to accept some degree of inequality in favor of rapid development uplifting everyone.
I disagree wirh capitalists, especially ones that amass inordinate amount, including billionaires. I’m more fine with those having less wealth but a billion gets into ridiculous territory. You gotta set a cap somewhere.
There’s some inequality and there’s some being dirt poor while others have billions. That’s just too much for me tbh. Especially since it’s not necessary for the current strategy to allow that amount of wealth.