https://townhall.com/columnists/john...ality-n2594795
   Source: AP Photo/Gerald Herbert, file
  Source: AP Photo/Gerald Herbert, file
 
 
    
  
   
       
 
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  Inequality is almost universally condemned by the  intellectual elite. But most of the rest of the world doesn’t think  inequality is such a bad thing. 
According to polling by Gallup, there are 
138 million people  in the world today who would like to immigrate to the United States.  Most of these people are poor. They tend to live in egalitarian  surroundings – they and their neighbors are all equally poor. (The  country with the highest percentage of would-be immigrants is Liberia.)
Yet  they want to come to a country with a great deal of inequality, knowing  they would start out at the bottom of the income ladder.
The attitude of these people isn’t all that different from the way the average American thinks.
Whether  you are raising capital for a startup company, or selling an antique  car, or raising money for a nonprofit organization, or just seeking a  new job – common sense suggests you are better off if the person you are  having lunch with has a lot more money than you have.
So, what is the intellectual elite complaining about? Most of the time, they are unclear. 
Let’s walk through some of the issues.
Inequality of pre-tax income.
In  a reasonably free market economy, you can get really rich if you are  really good at meeting other people’s needs. J. K. Rowling became one of  the world’s richest self-made women by meeting people’s needs for  entertainment. Bill Gates became one of the world’s richest men by  meeting our IT needs. If you invented a cure for Alzheimer’s, you would  become one of the world’s richest people almost overnight.
   
  
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If you are a
 utilitarian and you think it’s good to meet as many human needs as possible, it’s hard to object to this type of inequality.
Inequality in the disposition of pre-tax income. 
Once  income is earned, does it matter what is done with it? LeBron James is  one of the sports world’s highest income earners. He has a choice of  consuming what he earns, or saving and investing it. To 
Paul Krugman,  that choice doesn’t matter. Krugman would take 90 percent of James’  earnings regardless. But if you are a utilitarian, that position is  impossible to defend.
Reportedly, Warren Buffet lives a very 
modest lifestyle.  So did Sam Walton, creator of Walmart. If you were concerned about  inequality of consumption, you wouldn’t impose an extra tax on either  one of them.
Moreover, when Warren Buffet is consuming,  he is benefiting Buffet. When he is saving, he is benefiting all the  rest of us.  When he puts his funds into the capital market, he is  increasing the capital stock. That means higher productivity, higher  output and higher economic growth.
   
 
You can justify a consumption tax (even a progressive consumption tax) on utilitarian grounds.
But  it is really hard to justify a tax on capital that is used to fund  consumption, a policy often advocated by those on the left. 
Economic growth is the most successful antipoverty mechanism the world has ever known.
How government policy reduces inequality. 
If  you care about inequality of consumption, then government taxation and  entitlement spending is where your focus should be. For this we should  be thankful to Lawrence Kotlikoff, Alan Auerbach and their colleagues  for 
doing the hard work.  They have analyzed the lifetime effects of all federal and state and  local taxes along with more than 30 different entitlement programs.
It  is generally recognized that the United States has one of the most  progressive income tax systems in the world. Kotlikoff and Auerbach have  discovered that we probably have one of the most progressive fiscal  systems in the world. 
The main finding: because of taxes and entitlement programs, there is a big difference between earnings inequality and spending inequality. 
   
 
For example, among people in their 40s, the  difference between the top 20 percent and the bottom 20% in terms of  resources earned over their remaining lifetime is 14 to 1. But the  difference in lifetime spending is only 7 to 1. In other words,  government policies cut inequality in half. Moreover, because of  government taxes, the richest 1% in this age group will get to spend  only one-third of what they earn.
How government policy increases inequality. 
Thanks  to the pioneering work of Kotlikoff and Auerbach, we now know that  there is a great deal of inequality created by the government – maybe  more than what is created by the private sector for some age groups.
To  address the government’s role in creating inequality, the two  economists looked at people at different ages and income levels and  measured their lifetime 
marginal net tax rate.   That’s the amount an individual sacrifices in taxes and lost  entitlement benefits from earning an extra dollar of income over their  remaining years of life. 
   

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In a 
Goodman Institute Brief Analysis  Kotlikoff explains:
There  is . . .  an enormous dispersion in marginal net tax rates among  households with the same level of resources. For example, nearly one  fifth of elderly in the lowest one-fifth face marginal net tax rates  above 60 percent. Yet, almost a quarter face marginal net tax rates  below 20 percent. In the top fifth, a full third of elderly are in 60  percent or higher marginal net tax brackets, whereas 14 percent are in  brackets below 40 percent . . . .
In the case of the  poorest 65–69-year-olds, those who earn an additional $20,000 (say, by  taking a full or part-time job) face a marginal net tax rate that ranges  from 8.8 percent to 627.9 percent!
These  incentives are the result of a highly complex system of taxes and  entitlement benefits that interact in very strange and unproductive  ways.  They also affect behavior in unequal ways. Someone who gets to  keep 91% of everything they earn is a lot more likely to participate in  the labor market than someone at the same income level who loses more  than $6 for every dollar they earn.
In the name of  reducing inequality, government policies already intervene heavily in  the private sector. Instead of a bigger role for the government, we  should focus on making those interventions fairer and less disruptive.
The socialists/DPSTs beloved 'equity' - is code for Communism - for all but them - the nomenklatura
They will continue to be more 'equal' than anyone - and Rules are for Thee - not Them!
Hypocrites
Communism does not work - other than as tyranny for the rich at the top- it is true 'capitalistic enterprise'- impoverishing the proles - enriching the nomenklatura.
See - Lenin, mao, Stalin, Xi, CCO, north Korea, maduro adn venezuela - the list is endless
And stupid DPSTs clamor for big communist government to 'take care of them - so they do not have to make decisions about their life"!
Idiots!