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Inflation IS a tax on wealth. When done intentionally (by printing money), it’s called seigniorage.


Only if the wealth is held in cash. Equities and real estate are a hedge against inflation.


In the US at least they're still still taxed for capital gains, but the capital gains tax doesn't account for inflation. So if there's 2% inflation that causes the value of your stocks to rise by 2%, that is taxed as a capital gain, so in real teams you have less money afterwards. Non-inflation-adjusted capital gains tax is essentially a wealth tax.


Fair point. But assumes Bezos doesn't loophole capital gains taxes to 0, which I could be wrong about but i feel like he does. That effect will also be maxed out to cap gains rates.


If my wealth is in anything beyond cash -- say I own a huge hotel chain, or the largest retail company in the country -- how is inflation a tax on my wealth? My businesses will still be generating the same proportion of the economy as they were before.


If inflation causes the nominal value of your hotel chain to increase 2%, you have to pay capital gains tax on this nominal gain (at least in countries where capital gains tax is not adjusted for inflation), leaving you with less real value afterwards.


Only if you sell. And if you're invested in a company that is only growing at the rate of inflation then I'd imagine they are paying a decent dividend which is very possibly a qualified dividend that has no tax associated with it. Reinvesting that into the company creates a compound effect far greater than the inflation rate and will be taxed at the LTCG rate one day when divested from.


That only matters if you realize the gains. If you own a business like a hotel, car wash, etc. and intend to keep it, you are not affected by value increases of the business itself. In fact, for many privately held businesses, it is not even known what the value of the business is because there is no reason to calculate it.


I'm not even sure how accurately some small businesses can be valued. A local cupcake lady or artist might run a business that makes decent money, but all the income and value is derived from their unique style. Remove them and the business is almost worthless.

If a tax on capital is instituted are there mechanisms to value such cases?


With the current wealth-tax proposals by Warren and Sanders. the owner first of all would probably owe zero wealth tax unless she was worth more than $32 million, or $50 million for Warren. I doubt any local cupcake businesses are worth anywhere close to that much.

Second, an actual business of that size would probably be owned by some other corporate entity created for that purpose, not an individual, and that entity would be paying its own taxes.

Finally, Warren and Sanders both plan on beefing up the IRS to answer these kinds of questions, which will certainly be thorny for some kinds of assets.


> Inflation IS a tax on wealth.

Only for wealth stored as currency. For debts, inflation effectively transfers money from lenders to borrowers by reducing the value of debts. Other things, for example stocks and real estate, are only nominally affected by inflation.


> Inflation IS a tax on wealth.

No, it's a “tax” on net holdings of the currency that is inflated.

That's not the same thing, as wealth in non-currency-denominated assets or assets denominated in a different currency aren't “taxed”.


Inflation comes in different flavors. If all you do is print and hand out 1bn to each citizen, they'll just be able to outspend other dollar holders in the world. Prices will adjust, but the amount of real goods in the world per capita is unchanged. You're just reallocating who gets what amongst monetary savers. If your wealth is in the actual stuff people end up buying, this is very much a side concern for you. Bezos is in that camp.


It's always done intentionally, by printing money one way or another.




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