Still over-simplifying. You are assuming that people can simply work harder and thus income will go up. Couple of problems, people are humans. They sleep, they eat, they need rest, they have families to take care of, they can only work so many hours in the day and there is only a limited amount of hours a day.Iosef Cross wrote:Of course, if you assume that leisure is a superior good, while income is a inferior good, them regressive taxes will make poor people work harder for two reasons: They will pay taxes, and due to the wealth effect they will work harder with smaller incomes due to these taxes, and taxes that decrease with the amount of work made (regressive taxes), will increase total working hours by marginal effect.
In Brazil inequality increased greatly between 1940 and 1980. Now it is decreasing since ~2000. Between 1980 and 2000 inequality and GDP stagnated. In 1940, 80% of the population was made by illiterate farmers, with ate what they grow. By 1980, 70% of the population lived in the cities, but there was a large proportion of people that still lived as subsistence farmers. Hence, social inequality increased brutally between 1940 and 1980, by 1980 there were two Brazil's, a richer city dwelling country, concentrated in the southern and central regions and a poorer country dwelling population, concentrated in the northeast region. Now, in the last 10 years, inequality is decreasing while the poorer regions in Brazil are being developed.THIS IS ABSOLUTELY FALSE. In the United states, the divide in income between the rich and poor has been growing dramatically, not shrinking, over the past few decades. As for progressive taxation not working, you shift the tax burden to the poor which I already pointed out why it's bad above. They have high fixed costs (necessary spending) and low variable spending (discretionary spending).Usually, inequality levels naturally decrease with the process of development. That's because first some people get better off while the others are behind (see the Kuznets curve). Then development spreads and the entire population gets better off. Since progressive taxation is not conductive for development, its implementation in developing countries will slow down development and hence, slow down the natural reduction of inequality. In the long run, progressive taxation can increased inequality!
In the US, between 1975 and 2010 incomes didn't increase much. Also, in 1975 the US was already a fully developed country.[/quote]
So you state that inequality increases, then decreases, then increases as a country becomes 'fully developed'? That's what it looks like you are stating here by accepting that US incomes have stagnated.
You too.[/quote]You are making a lot of assertions and giving it out as fact and building from there without quantifying it nor providing evidence for it. Please provide actual evidence supporting you assertions.
yeah? Like what? You are making an assertion, you have to back it up. I don't have to provide anything to back up my reply to your assertion until you do, but if you insist:
http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2008/10/ ... 5488.shtml
In a 20-year study of its member countries, the Paris-based Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development said wealthy households are not only widening the gap with the poor, but in countries such as the U.S., Canada and Germany they are also leaving middle-income earners further behind, with potentially ominous consequences if the global financial crisis sparks a long recession.