Saturday, April 13, 2013

Marshall Auerback — Should we tax excess corporate profits?

In North America, the reversal of the net lending/borrowing position of the business and household sectors is of critical importance in understanding the evolution of financial capitalism over the last decade, with much of the speculative drive having been fueled by the growing savings of the corporate sector. It was the rentier behaviour of the corporate sector, with the latter finding it ever more lucrative to engage in financial acquisitions, which largely led to an abandoning of productive investment since the 1990s.
When an economy becomes financialised and therefore far less productive, it becomes more prone to fraud, greater financial instability, and higher rates of unemployment. But it serves the interests of the economic rentiers. Minsky was right: you need a “big government” to act as a stabilising bulwark against the financialisation of the economy. Taxing retained corporate earnings is clearly another aspect of dealing with the ravages of money market capitalism.
Michael Hudson calls it "taxing away economic rent."

Macrobits
Should we tax excess corporate profits?
Marshall Auerback | Corporate Spokesperson, Pinetree Capital Ltd.
(h/t Kevin Fathi via email)


Cant' get clearer and more succinct than this about the role of fiscal deficits:
Deficit spending by the government is merely the counterpart of private sector saving. What government deficit spending does is to permit the private sector to achieve its level of desired saving. When the latter changes, government spending ought to be adjusting in the opposite direction to offset it (unless the current account balance happens to do the job).




2 comments:

Unknown said...
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Unknown said...

In order to unwind the financialisation of the economy you need to take away the banks capacity to create money. Their ability to create money gives them an advantage over all other sectors and of course the economy is becoming financialized. The problem with a big government is that it may not work to stabilize against the financialisation of the economy but indeed assist in this financialisation.

What is we need is to modify how our monetary system works so that the fed conducts policy directly with the public removing private banks and the government from interfering in the financial system for the benefit of the big players.

Cmamonetary.org