this post was submitted on 04 Dec 2025
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What's that number that's being thrown around, top 10% of incomes account for 50% of consumer spending?
...yeah, from February of this year:
https://www.wsj.com/economy/consumers/us-economy-strength-rich-spending-2c34a571
https://archive.is/aKMCd
Yes, inequality is increasing in the US.
But I don't really get how that relates. Anyway, may point is that if you bracket the tax at high enough incomes, maybe not even a 99% marginal tax rate will suffice for making rich people move away. Those people are rich, they don't care about spending some money to live where they want.
The same is not true about the poor, by the way. It's easy to tax them so much that they leave.
And Laffer focusing his work on the rich was the cheapest and most plain sell-out on the academic history.
My point is that inflation will drive down consumer spending for most people, but the highest incomes barely notice anything has changed.
Oh, I see.
Good point. I didn't notice the huge empirical test for it running right now.
Life is a Grand Experiment, no?
Making more than $250,000 a year doesn't make you wealthy, it just means you have disposable income.
Being wealthy means you don't have any income, you just get loans against your static wealth at incredibly favorable interest rates.
It's more than that, because the wealth of those who utilize loans this way typically isn't static. It's not about just getting a good rate, it's that the assets they use as collateral appreciate in value at a rate higher than inflation and the interest rate combined, so in practice, the interest rate is literally negative. The price of having access to these loans is that their net worth just grows a bit more slowly as a result.
Of course, this only works as long as said assets continue to appreciate at that rate.
Well, ≥$250,000 covers everything from $250,001 to $1,000,000 or 100,000,000 and beyond. The low end of that category includes people who are payed well for highly specialized and/or accredited labor, while the high end is mostly people who own things for a living.
Sure, it's not exactly precise to lump the highest end of labor in with everything from your local car-dealership capitalist all the way the tippy top of hedge-fund owners. But it still indicates a very, very unhealthy consumer economy.