Some interesting leaps of faith there. Has this actually happened anywhere?
The Irish version was;
Higher productivity, leading to lower income taxes and higher consumption taxes (penalising those who earn less) and a greater standard of living for some (but definitely not all).
If anyone really thinks that higher productivity leads to a situation that "penalising those who earn less" then they don't understand very basic economics or the first thing about what’s happened in this country over the last ten years.
Socialism, communism, call it what you like.
Higher consumption tax was a state intervention. Apart from that Ireland may have injoyed some productivity gains in the early yearts of the boom, but then the government induced construction and property boom took hold.
How do you measure 'very high standard of living'. I see Switz coming behind Ireland on the Human Development Index, though those figures are a little dated. They are low on obesity measures (must be exporting all the chocolate). They seem to be right in the middle of the tables for developed counties on measures like infant deaths, drug use, imprisonment rates, trust measures, so I wondering what measures you were using?Switzerland is one example: high wages, low income taxes, low VAT, very high standard of living.
But low income tax wasn't? Is it just those decisions that you don't like that you label 'interventions'?Higher consumption tax was a state intervention.
Yes Switzerland is behind Ireland, but the HDI rating of the top 10 countries are minutely different. However, Switzerland achieves this top 10 spot with extremely low taxes. Add to that higher wages and an increadibly good health service and system, based on universal private health insurance, that costs less per person than the Irish system and delivers hell of a lot more. Swiss unemployment is around 4%, and this in a country that has a very large financial sector during the worst financial crisis of modern history.How do you measure 'very high standard of living'. I see Switz coming behind Ireland on the Human Development Index, though those figures are a little dated. They are low on obesity measures (must be exporting all the chocolate). They seem to be right in the middle of the tables for developed counties on measures like infant deaths, drug use, imprisonment rates, trust measures, so I wondering what measures you were using?
My point being, that lowering one tax and increasing another to please the governments needs/wants is direct intervention. E.g. stamp duty on houses was gradually reduced and then abolished for FTBs which fueled the housing bubble; at the same time Ireland had one of the highest VAT rates in the EU.But low income tax wasn't? Is it just those decisions that you don't like that you label 'interventions'?
OK, so it is all anectodal evidence, based on a couple of visits and a couple of friends. Hardly a basis for an economics arguement.Yes Switzerland is behind Ireland, but the HDI rating of the top 10 countries are minutely different. However, Switzerland achieves this top 10 spot with extremely low taxes. Add to that higher wages and an increadibly good health service and system, based on universal private health insurance, that costs less per person than the Irish system and delivers hell of a lot more. Swiss unemployment is around 4%, and this in a country that has a very large financial sector during the worst financial crisis of modern history.
I have also visited Switzerland a couple of times, and have friends who have moved their in recent years, and feedback is extremely good.
I'm not clear why you persist in labelling Govt policies that you don't like as 'intervention'. Any Govt policy, whether increasing or lowering taxes are interventions.My point being, that lowering one tax and increasing another to please the governments needs/wants is direct intervention. E.g. stamp duty on houses was gradually reduced and then abolished for FTBs which fueled the housing bubble; at the same time Ireland had one of the highest VAT rates in the EU.
Apart from this being your personal opinion, is there any good reason why it should be taken as Govt policy? Is your entire arguement based around the one unproven example of Switzerland, or is there something more here?All forms of taxes are interventions and should always be kept to an absolute minimum. This can only be achieved by having a government that is as small as possible, which directly contradicts socialism.
no, he added anecdotal evidence after giving some facts.OK, so it is all anectodal evidence, based on a couple of visits and a couple of friends. Hardly a basis for an economics arguement.
The less the government takes out of the economy and redirects back in the less they are intervening.I'm not clear why you persist in labelling Govt policies that you don't like as 'intervention'. Any Govt policy, whether increasing or lowering taxes are interventions.
Will he change your mind if he does?Apart from this being your personal opinion, is there any good reason why it should be taken as Govt policy? Is your entire arguement based around the one unproven example of Switzerland, or is there something more here?
no, he added anecdotal evidence after giving some facts.
The less the government takes out of the economy and redirects back in the less they are intervening.
Is your entire arguement based around the one unproven example of Switzerland, or is there something more here?
It should also be remembered that the free market is an artificial construct and open competition can only exist with intervention and active regulation from governments.
Thanks Purple, this answers the questions.
As already mentioned, the Swiss case is not unproven. Another example of huge economic gains in absence of most government interventions is Germany after WWII (I already posted a comment and link, but here it is again: http://mises.org/daily/3635).
The UK and most of Europe, along with North America had the biggest, continuous (100+ years) economic growth in history during the industrial revolution, which was led by private enterprises at a time when taxation and government intervention was at a minimum. This led to an improvement in living standards and life style of everyone, unmatched, in even the remotest sense, by anything that any government has ever tried.
BTW, my argument is based on Austrian Economics and is not just some theory I have come up with.
This could have more to do with technological advances than systems of government e.g. look at China now. Your dataset may be too short, the length of time for judgement too brief. China is a country where the government controls EVERYTHING yet is doing spectacularly well. Other very successful countries in the region have followed similar though less authoritarian model in general...Taiwan, Korea, Singapore, HK. They have large amounts of private companies but many are/were state sector or sponsored as national champions by the government in some way.
Basically, travel a little, learn a foreign language, get the anglo-centric and euro-centric view of thinking out of your heads.
This could have more to do with technological advances than systems of government e.g. look at China now. Your dataset may be too short, the length of time for judgement too brief. China is a country where the government controls EVERYTHING yet is doing spectacularly well. Other very successful countries in the region have followed similar though less authoritarian model in general...Taiwan, Korea, Singapore, HK. They have large amounts of private companies but many are/were state sector or sponsored as national champions by the government in some way.
Basically, travel a little, learn a foreign language, get the anglo-centric and euro-centric view of thinking out of your heads.
Yes indeed, but all those technological advances came from private enterprises that prospered through innovations. No governments intervened by using taxation to redistribute money into certain sectors. It was the free market and profit/loss system without government intervention that set this time of vast technological and industrial growth in motion.This could have more to do with technological advances than systems of government e.g. look at China now.
China's "total control" is a common misconception. It took a friend of mine 9 months to expand his business by 25 employees in Germany in 2008. Last year he set up his first production facility in China, with 70 employees, and it took him a total of 3 months and far less paper work and regulation to satisfy. China makes it a lot easier to do business than most people think.Your dataset may be too short, the length of time for judgement too brief. China is a country where the government controls EVERYTHING yet is doing spectacularly well. Other very successful countries in the region have followed similar though less authoritarian model in general...Taiwan, Korea, Singapore, HK. They have large amounts of private companies but many are/were state sector or sponsored as national champions by the government in some way.
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