To EMR Global: All household net worth over about $500,000 would be taxed at 1-2%. So moving money out of the stock market would do an investor no good.
To Ghost: In the original post I say it id impractical to tax unrealized gains. For one thing the tax revenue would swing wildly form year to year. The 1-2% tax on net worth is essentially a 20% tax on presumed average 7% total returns, close to what workers pay. In compenstaion my proposal eliminates realized capital gains taxes, estate taxes, perhaps even qualified dividend taxes.
Some young guy "If you think the Rich family should be taxed at a higher rate, you think that the gov't can do a better job of investing/spending that money than the Rich family. It's that simple."
No its not that simple. The Riches should be taxed more so the Smiths can be taxed less, since the Smiths have much less ability to pay and have profited much less form the services governments provide (Where would businesses and investors be without roads, an educated work force, monetary policy, basic science research, elderly still able to spend rather than live in poverty..?) The Richs should also be taxed more because, even with all the spending cuts that can be gotten through any Congress, we are running huge deficits. I agree there is about 20% of government spending that could be cut, but its's not going to happen no matter who holds Congress) Thus, we are saddling our kids and their kids with debt instead of investing their future.
The Richs add to economy, but so do the Smiths. Under my proposal the Smith's still pay 13K in annual total taxes (down form 21K). The Richs pay 19K, up from 5K. This seems proportional to their ability to pay. With the extra money the Smiths spending goes up more than the Rich's would go down. The Rich's would probably invest a little less. It's wrong to assume more investment is good - > which gets to your last question:
Both favored tax treatment and great wealth disparity encourage more investments (fact)
When investment is out of proportion to investment/spending, too much money chases too few worhty investments (fact)
By supply and demand investment prices soar to levels that do not justify the returns they can produce (fact) This is a bubble.
Bubble bursts and then we have a recession. Workers and investors suffer. (fact)
We've had a decade of favored tax treatment for investment and huge wealth disparity: the result is that workers are out of work, wages have dropped, and the stock market is down about 20% over a decade! The supply-side tricke-down is not working out for anyone.
All this is complex but important - Spend and hour looking over
http://elitetrader.com and I'll spend and hour looking over something you suggest