Megan McCardle explains well the powerful economic case against taxing wealth. Two slices:
If you want to give people real goods and services, look at the supply of those goods and services, not paper wealth. Wealth is a claim on future resources, such as corporate profits, or the right to occupy a certain house. Those claims are valuable, and people are willing to sacrifice some current consumption to acquire them — as you do when you divert your salary into a 401(k). But while you can turn your 401(k) into consumption in an emergency (or in retirement), that’s only possible because you sell the stock to someone else who is willing to reduce their consumption to buy the stock.
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People see Musk’s $670 billion fortune and imagine turning that into $670 billion worth of services — say, the health care and education mentioned in the wealth tax bill. But Musk is not sitting on hundreds of billions worth of dentists and primary school classrooms. He has a bunch of stock certificates, which are not useful in health care or education. They do not make good bandages or scratch paper.
That doesn’t mean we can’t transfer consumption from billionaires to other people. But their paper wealth is irrelevant to that conversation. What matters is how much they currently consume: about a third of their annual income, according to one paper published by the University of Michigan Law School last year, or about 3 percent of their total wealth. Notice that that’s less than 5 percent.
John Puri writes insightfully about Friday’s disappointing jobs report. A slice:
The statistical hits keep coming: Blame can’t be pinned on federal layoffs anymore, because, of the 92,000 net jobs lost in January, 86,000 were in the private economy. Downward revisions to December and January numbers lowered the U.S. jobs total by another 69,000. Manufacturing continues to bleed jobs, despite (or, partly because of) Trump’s tariffs that were supposed to spark an industrial resurgence.
This fiasco didn’t happen naturally. It was built by the tax code—specifically, the exclusion of employer-sponsored health insurance from taxable income. As Michael Cannon of the Cato Institute has documented, the exclusion is roughly as old as the income tax itself, rooted in early Treasury rulings that predated modern health insurance.
In the early 1940s, wartime wage controls gave the concept practical force. Employers who couldn’t compete to hire workers with wages started using health benefits, which were exempt from the controls, as a workaround. But employer-purchased health insurance did not see robust growth until after wage ceilings were lifted in 1953. Congress then codified the exclusion in 1954, cementing employer-based insurance as the dominant model, a consequence few anticipated at the time.
The tax break is projected to reduce income- and payroll-tax revenue by $487 billion this year. The consequences have been a calamity. [Michael] Cannon has convinced me that this single provision is the most damaging in the entire tax code. And it’s not just because of the fiscal cost—it is three times larger than the next tax break in the code—but because of the behavior it has shaped over eight decades.
The provision has chained workers to their employers. It has practically eliminated consumer price sensitivity. It’s suppressed wages that could have been paid in cash instead of in the form of health insurance. Altogether, it’s systematically crowded out the direct, consumer-driven health care spending that creates genuine market pressure to limit costs.
In response to a discussion among market skeptics of the alleged failure over the past few decades of capitalism in America – as one of these skeptics put it, “American capitalism is failing most Americans” – Scott Winship tweets this: (HT Scott Lincicome)
File this under academics torching their credibility. Capitalism failing most Americans? C’mon, man. Median hourly wages (for men and women), annual earnings (for men and women), and family and household incomes are at all-time highs!
Paul Mueller talks with Sam Gregg and Dave Hebert about the tariff ruling in Learning Resources.


Globalization encourages the capitalist engine of growth. If people understood how generous that engine has been they would have less enthusiasm for protectionism or socialism or environmentalist or economic nationalism in any of their varied forms. Most educated people believe that the gains to income from capitalism’s triumph have been modest, that the poor have been left behind, that the Third World (should we start calling it the Second?) has been immiserized in aid of the First, that population growth must be controlled, that diminishing returns on the whole has been the main force in world economic history since 1800. All these notions are factually erroneous. But you’ll find all of them in the mind of the average professor of political philosophy.
People living in wealthy countries who are at the bottom of today’s income distribution are better off on most fronts than almost everyone who ever lived prior to 300 years ago.
The capitalist deal is: Let me make profits and I’ll make you rich.
It is just here, I submit, that the ultimate issue is joined, on the question of whether men shall be inviolable persons or as things to be disposed of; it is here that the struggle between barbarism and civilization, between despotism and liberty, has always been fought. Here it must still be fought.
