Abstract
This article analogizes the state, in its role as tax collector, to
that of an investor, or to be more precise, that of a residual claimant on
the earnings of all of the people and firms subject to the taxing power of
the state. The relationship between modern democracy and its citizens
would be strengthened if this analogy were more widely acknowledged
because it recognizes citizen-taxpayers as contracting partners with the
state. Unlike other libertarian conceptions of the state's taxing
authority, the framework developed here does not jeopardize the state's
ability to collect the revenues it needs to provide for the protections of
its citizens.The state-as-investor framework developed in this Article leads to a
number of tax policy improvements. The framework suggests limits on the
government's ability to change people's tax status after they have already
embarked on careers and made the sunken, non-diversifiable investments in
human capital that such career training requires. The framework advanced
here also suggests that people should be able to make a once-in-a lifetime
payment in lieu of taxes to the state in order to discharge their tax
liability. This approach articulated here also seems superior to the
utopian suggestion offered by Ayn Rand that taxation be voluntary, as well
as to the unrealistic suggestion made by Nozick that income taxes are
violative of man's natural rights.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
General Social Sciences,Philosophy
Cited by
2 articles.
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