Oregon Should Take Note of New Jersey’s Woes
13 Feb
A new study from New Jersey suggests that wealth leaves when tax rates increase. New Jersey’s Chamber Chairman Dennis Bone says it is
crystal clear that the state’s tax policies are resulting in a significant decline in the state’s wealth.
A more insidious effect is that the study found a
less-robust “in-migration,” the study finds that people who are moving to New Jersey aren’t as wealthy as those leaving.
So why would one care about those wealthy people who want to “escape” paying their “fair share”.
Well for one thing, class warfare is bad. Nobody likes to be called a villain, particularly those who are working hard to be successful for their families, their co-workers, and their communities. Making people feel guilty for being successful is not conducive for a healthy community.
For another, you need a concentration of “excess” wealth to feedback into the local investment of new technology and jobs. Governments do not do this; they redistribute wealth. Individuals and corporations operating in their own self-interest invest in opportunities that create wealth, which as a by-product create additional goods, services, and jobs.
I am not suggesting that we “starve” schools. What I am suggesting is that if you chase out (or otherwise make the community unattractive for those who wish to immigrate into that community) those who are at the head of the bell curve in terms of success, the community will eventually suffer. All one has to do is look at the problems seen in New York, California, and New Jersey.
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