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#1 |
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I once heard a quote from Adam Smith (paraphrase):
"Whenever you see two business men talking, they are in a conspiracy against the public." Confirm or deny? I have also heard that the "invisible hand" market conservatives sometimes refer to is only mentioned once in _The Wealth of Nations_, a massive tome that I admit to not having read (yet). Thoughts? |
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#2 | ||
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Yes he said it but those who quote it only quote the part they want when they propose governmet regulation. The full quote is:
Quote:
And yes the "invisible hand" is only mentioned once, at the very beginning. Quote:
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#3 | |
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He seems to be in favor of progressive taxation.
From The Wealth of Nations Quote:
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#4 | |
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The "invisible hand" also shows up in Smith's Theory of Moral Sentiments:
Quote:
Smith also used the phrase in some essay on astronomy. |
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#5 | |
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If you read the entire passage you would see that what he was proposed was something very similar to a flat consumption based tax. |
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#6 | ||
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Quote:
As an aside, Smith's "Wealth of Nations" can be found online in its entirety here if anyone is interested. |
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#7 | |
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If you bother to read the entire section on taxation you would see that Smith proposed two ways to collect taxes. 1.) A consumption tax on luxury items. He was very clear on luxury and non-luxury items. Basicly food, clothing, and shelter are tax free. Everything else is a luxury and taxable. 2.) "Ground-rents" He was very much opposed to excise taxes, customs, and taxes on profits. And most of all his harshest criticisms was a tax on labor, the area where progressive taxation occurs. |
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#8 |
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Semantics aside, the point that I am trying to make is that Smith's phrase "The subjects of every state ought to contribute toward the support of the government in proportion to their respective abilities" lies at the very heart of the incentive for, and implementation of, progressive taxation.
And apparently, I'm not alone in this belief, as judged by Professor Fleischacker's article. Conservatives and libertarians don't have a monopoly on interpreting the Gospel according to Smith. |
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#9 |
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No, you are trying to take one sentence from a 1000+ page book to propose that the author supports an idea that didn't even exist during his time.
I beg of you, go read the entire work and then come back an tell me if Adam Smith thought a complex progressive tax system was a good idea. Not quote some sound byte from a socialist philosopher who can only get published in a two bit rag. |
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