I don't follow US politics much, but you're wrong to say that there is 'huge focus on taxing the rich' here in Ireland. It actually gets very little coverage, and very little media. It certainly gets very little time in any serious political debates.
Yes there is the same focus here and it has already been done with marginal rates of taxation up to 53% and capital gains taxes up to 30%. There was huge debate about how the deficit would be fixed and how much would come from "cuts" and how much from increased taxes during the last election. Election campaigns hardly fall outside the category of "serious political debates".
No-one is suggesting that it is the sole solution to our woes. But it is certainly a part of the solution.
As I already stated, the loudest advocates of taxing the rich are putting it forward as the solution of all solutions. You are also ignoring the fact that taxing the rich will bring in more money in the short term but less in the long term, which will exacerbate the problem. When there is less money for investment in private business there are less jobs created, it is as simple as that.
That's a fairly simplistic analysis. There are wealthy people who (shock horror, hold onto your seat) believe that they should be paying more tax, not less - 68% of millionaires in one US survey supported additional taxes - see
http://blogs.wsj.com/wealth/2011/10/27/most-millionaires-support-warren-buffetts-tax-on-the-rich/
No it is not simplistic analysis, what is simplistic is for you to not actually take a closer look at the survey and what those 68% are proposing:
A new survey from Spectrem Group found that 68% of millionaires (those with investments of $1 million or more) support raising taxes on those with $1 million or more in income.
You can have $1 million in assets and have a far lower income than $1 million per year. What this survey has achieved is asking those who would not be affected by the higher tax if they would be in favour of it. The survey is flawed from the outset. The results would be totally different if they had only asked those with income above $1 million that would actually be affected.
Buffet is as much a hypocrite as Bono, especially when it comes to the dishonesty over his actual rate of taxation: [broken link removed]
I know, very inconvenient when the truth comes out and blows holes in flawed theories.
We certainly have a huge financial gap to close, but every little does indeed help to close this gap. We certainly want people who will spend, and generate exports to come here - but you're not a sole spokesperson for that group. There are wealthy, export-generating people who believe they/we should be paying more tax.
Then why don't they send a cheque to the revenue if they feel so passionately about it? The answer is that it is all just talk by a few people who are looking for a better image and who would not be affected by the taxes they are advocating. The same people hire tax advisors for their business and personal interests to reduce taxes as much as is possible, but they then advocate higher taxation.
Do you honestly think that you will be able to convince South Africa to eliminate apartheid? Do you honestly think that you will be able to convince Myanmar to free Aung San Suu Kyi? Do you honestly think that you will be able to persuade Switzerland to stop laundering mafia money, and al-queda money? Oh right - we've already done the unthinkable, and we can do it again, if we really want.
Your analogies are completely in reverse, taking ever more money from wealthy people who made their money by other people voluntarily buying their goods and services is immoral and damaging to the economy and a few countries understand this and take advantage of it. Your question should be whether you could/should convince SA to reintroduce apartheid, or Burma to imprison San Suu Kyi again.
You are also not advocating that one country change one policy, you are saying that all countries should introduce a wealth tax of some kind so that rich people have no way of avoiding it. Do you honestly believe that is achievable? Achievable in any time frame that will actually avoid the looming train wreck?
We are in a car heading towards a cliff in thick fog. You don't slow down the car, you stop it immediately. And to clarify, by we I mean Europe and North America, Ireland has already found the cliff.
Or raise the rates, and commit to keeping them high - remove all that nasty uncertainty, and let people run their businesses and investments based on real reasons, not on tax reasons.
Truly amazing, you are contradicting yourself within two lines of text. Why do you think rich people would be inclined to invest more if the tax rates were increased more? Why would a business person or investor take on the same risk, but enjoy less of the reward? Taxes have the exact opposite effect to what you are suggesting; they increase uncertainty and reduce the incentive to invest!
I've been at those annual meetings, and most people come out of the meetings going 'I dunno really' and follow some default recommendation from the fund manager (who will be working hard to avoid any hard questions about the value returned for his commission compared to 'buy the index' strategy.
The point is that it is just as easy for an average Joe to invest their entire pension outside the country as it is for a rich person to do so. Whether they do so or not is up to them.