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Taxation could work, especially when there'll be no more tax havens.

Rentiers a burden?... Those two guys earned their own money, paid building companies to build apartments (so they indirectly gave work to -- algerian illegals,  well there might be something there), rented to people at fair price, maintained the property. I think your problem is with greedy, dishonest rentiers. I have that problem with all greedy dishonest, btw :)

The issue is not if they can buy seats or not, for we need to know who does, when and what it costs. It's illegal to buy seats. Inherited health may still have sane basis, right. My Breton landlords had a daughter too if I remember well, imagine her luck. I would tax inheritance - up to a point though, for I don't see any moral problem, except a risk of corrupting the offspring.
If we raise the scale and speak about factories -- give them back to the -- State, then?... To political fiefdoms ? Hmm.

I would rather have a problem with hereditary fiefs, rather than the nobility per se. And you should count the number of former nobility working in finance and who are now buying back their old castles and some new ones.

Free at last! Free at last! Thank God Almighty, we are free at last! (Martin Luther King)

by ValentinD (walentijn arobase free spot frança) on Wed Mar 11th, 2009 at 08:36:46 PM EST
[ Parent ]
Rentiers a burden?... Those two guys earned their own money, paid building companies to build apartments (so they indirectly gave work to -- algerian illegals,  well there might be something there), rented to people at fair price, maintained the property.

I should re-phrase. Rentiering is a burden. The actual people involved may or may not be, overall, depending on whether they have previously contributed something of value to justify their current status.

I don't begrudge people who worked honest jobs for decades that they retire as rentiers. Although I would prefer if they could retire on adequate public pensions instead. But you work with the political economy you have, not with the one you'd like.

What I do begrudge somewhat is the people who buy at the bottom of the market and then, purely because rental values soar for a decade, can rent out and use the rent to pay interest on the mortgage and amortise the mortgage. Although that's still mostly small fry, and irritates me more because of what it says about the lack of counter-cyclical real estate policy than for the actual rentiering involved.

If we raise the scale and speak about factories -- give them back to the -- State, then?

The state can always auction them off, if you think that it's undesirable to have the government run factories.

- Jake

If you only spend 20 minutes of the rest of your life on economics, go spend them here.

by JakeS (JangoSierra 'at' gmail 'dot' com) on Thu Mar 12th, 2009 at 06:24:09 AM EST
[ Parent ]

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