sabato 29 dicembre 2007

The Inflation Tax

All government spending represents a tax. The inflation tax, while largely ignored, hurts middle-class and low-income Americans the most. Simply put, printing money to pay for federal spending dilutes the value of the dollar, which causes higher prices for goods and services. Inflation may be an indirect tax, but it is very real – the individuals who suffer most from cost of living increases certainly pay a “tax.”
Unfortunately no one in Washington, especially those who defend the poor and the middle class, cares about this subject. Instead, all we hear is that tax cuts for the rich are the source of every economic ill in the country. Anyone truly concerned about the middle class suffering from falling real wages, under-employment, a rising cost of living, and a decreasing standard of living should pay a lot more attention to monetary policy. Federal spending, deficits, and Federal Reserve mischief hurt the poor while transferring wealth to the already rich. This is the real problem, and raising taxes on those who produce wealth will only make conditions worse.
Borrowing money to cut the deficit is only marginally better than raising taxes. It may delay the pain for a while, but the cost of government eventually must be paid. Federal borrowing means the cost of interest is added, shifting the burden to a different group than those who benefited and possibly even to another generation. Eventually borrowing is always paid for through taxation.
The third option is for the Federal Reserve to create credit to pay the bills Congress runs up. Nobody objects, and most Members hope that deficits don’t really matter if the Fed accommodates Congress by creating more money. Besides, interest payments to the Fed are lower than they would be if funds were borrowed from the public, and payments can be delayed indefinitely merely by creating more credit out of thin air to buy U.S. treasuries. No need to soak the rich. A good deal, it seems, for everyone. But is it?
The “tax” is paid when prices rise as the result of a depreciating dollar. Savers and those living on fixed or low incomes are hardest hit as the cost of living rises. Low- and middle-incomes families suffer the most as they struggle to make ends meet while wealth is literally transferred from the middle class to the wealthy. Government officials stick to their claim that no significant inflation exists, even as certain necessary costs are skyrocketing and incomes are stagnating.
The transfer of wealth comes as savers and fixed-income families lose purchasing power, large banks benefit, and corporations receive plush contracts from the government – as is the case with military contractors. These companies use the newly printed money before it circulates, while the middle class is forced to accept it at face value later on. This becomes a huge hidden tax on the middle class, many of whom never object to government spending in hopes that the political promises will be fulfilled and they will receive some of the goodies. But surprise – it doesn’t happen. The result instead is higher prices for prescription drugs, energy, and other necessities. The freebies never come.
The moral of the story is that spending is always a tax. The inflation tax, though hidden, only makes things worse. Taxing, borrowing, and inflating to satisfy wealth transfers from the middle class to the rich in an effort to pay for profligate government spending, can never make a nation wealthier. But it certainly can make it poorer.

Ron Paul, July 18, 2006
by http://www.lewrockwell.com/paul/paul334.html

(Dr. Ron Paul is a Republican member of Congress from Texas and a candidate for President of U.S.A.)


Scopi di questo blog

Questo Blog nasce con scopi precisi.
1. Mettere in contatto tra loro Les Émigrés Italiens, gli emigrati italiani.
L'Italia è divenuta un paese invivibile. Famiglie di dominanti di qualità scadente ci fanno vivere, tartassati, in un inferno di immigrati, di spaccio, di prostituzione, di leggi vessatorie, di criminalità, di locali notturni, di centri sociali, di inquinamento e rumori.
Ovvio che chi può cominci a guardarsi intorno: il mondo è vasto, e altri paesi possono offrire qualità di vita, sicurezza, tranquillità (anche fiscale) ben maggiori. Negli scorsi decenni di oppressione fiscale e ideologica decine di migliaia di Italiani, appartenenti ai ceti produttivi, se ne sono già andati all'estero.
Andarsene è una scelta non facile, comporta un impegno personale e familiare e un cambiamento totale delle abitudini di vita.
Coloro che questa scelta l'hanno già attuata, e coloro che sono in procinto di attuarla, possono trovare in questo blog un luogo di dialogo e di scambio d'informazioni e consigli.
2. Riscoprire e rivalutare la cultura tradizionale europea e occidentale.
Le ideologie ipocrite e volgari degli ultimi due secoli dello scorso millennio hanno portato a un declino apparentemente irreversibile la Grande Europa dei millenni precedenti. Un paralizzante statalismo assistenzialista sta soffocando anche la naturale dinamicità e produttività degli Stati Uniti d'America, incrinandone i tradizionali valori di libertà, proprietà, free trade.
Va quindi effettuata un'attenta, imparziale, profonda opera di revisione storica sul ruolo delle varie classi sociali nella costruzione della grandezza economica e culturale delle civiltà occidentali.
3. Sostenere le tesi economiche e culturali della Scuola Austriaca.
Tale corrente di pensiero vanta grandi economisti quali Ludwig Von Mises, Friedrich August Von Hayek, Murray Newton Rothbard, Hans-Hermann Hoppe, Jesus Huerta De Soto. Provvisoriamente connesso a questo terzo scopo, in occasione delle elezioni presidenziali USA, questo Blog sostiene il candidato Ron Paul, ammirandone le idee e il coraggio.
Filippo Matteucci Di San Ginesio