this post was submitted on 07 Aug 2023
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Economics
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You're assuming marginal cash has the same value for everyone. It doesn't. Losing 20% at the top bracket might barely be felt. Maybe can't buy quite as many classic cars for the collection, or can only have eight yahts, instead of nine. But at the bottom, that 20% can mean the difference between being able to make rent and ending up homeless, or between being able to pay the power bill or not. It can be the difference between having to get a payday loan or not (and thus cause a loss of considerably more than 20%).
Look up the term "marginal utility" for an academic treatment of the subject.
I'm not assuming that. I'm just explaining the rationale behind tax progressivity. A 20% flat income tax is not regressive by definition. It sucks but its not regressive because that term refers to something specific.
I'm well aware of what marginal utility is and why it's not really equal pain which is why I used the quotes.