Probably Over Most People's Heads, but Here's How I See It.

Posted on the 14 January 2015 by Markwadsworth @Mark_Wadsworth

In some ways, you can envisage the economy as something like the fresh water system.
It starts with little puddles and springs up in the mountains and on hillsides, these flow into small streams, then into larger streams, then merge into tributary rivers which ultimately merge into larger rivers which then flow out into the open sea.
By analogy:
Individual transactions = little puddles and mountain springs
Everything starts with individual transactions. Some are profitable for both parties, some for just one party and some for neither, there's a lot of trial an error involved and nobody really knows. But overall there are benefits when people make these millions of little exchanges or transactions each day.
Similarly, puddles dry up quickly and mountain streams only flow if it has been raining further uphill. They are not always there.
Profits and wages = large streams and tributary rivers
Most businesses make profits, out of which they pay wages. They enter into thousands or millions of little transactions, most of which generate a small profit, some generate losses, but overall, they net off to a profit. Sometimes, a business or a business model fails, the loss making transactions start to outweight the profitable ones and *bang* the business is gone, the workers are unemployed.
Similarly, while some small springs and streams can dry up, overall, the rivers they flow into will usually be getting water from somewhere or other, larger rivers are more predictable.
Rents = the largest rivers which flow into the open sea
If, and only if, there are businesses making profits and workers needing housing, then rents arise.
Like large rivers flowing into the sea, these are the most stable thing in the economy. Such rivers are highly unlikely to dry up, there will always be water flowing in from somewhere or other, they are the most predictable of all. If one business or worker isn't prepared to pay the rent or purchase price, then another one will.
And when the water flows into the sea, it is lost. It turns from valuable fresh water into worthless sea water. Nobody can use it to generate hydro-electricity, drive water mills, drink it, or use it to grow food, for cooking and washing, most indutrial processes etc.
(For sure, we need water in the sea for international shipping and fisheries, that's salt water not fresh water and a separate topic.)
The analogy which regular readers probably saw coming...
The open sea fills the same purpose and provides the same benefits to the nation as private collection or enjoyment of rents. None whatsoever. It just scoops up as much as possible of what everybody else contributes or what's left over.
So if collecting taxes is the same as diverting fresh water, from where should the government collect it, in terms of causing the least damage to the economy and re-cycling the rent (fresh water) back into the economy, or in terms of lowest collection costs?
From mountain springs, small streams, larger streams or from tidal estuaries? If you collect water just at the point where it would have flowed into the open sea, it has absolutely no effect on anybody.
So... should the government be taxing transactions, wages, profits or rents?
Here endeth today's lesson.