Redistributors: you have to love their total ignorance of ethics or philosophy.
We
all know there’s a baby-boomer retirement problem coming; unfortunately this is
providing more excuses for grand larceny by those people who would prescribe for
a whole nation of adults, what would be morally abhorrent if I applied to their
children. Hear me out, and look at this:
Retirement
policy researcher Associate Professor Susan St John says an alternative could
be looking at improving the tax system and the way it operates.
"For
high income retirees, for example, who
could pay a bit more without any undue pain, and help the immediate fiscal
position."
Heaven
help you if you earn money in this country.
What
Susan is saying is who cares how hard retirees have worked through their lives,
or the plans and aspirations for themselves in retirement they were planning for. As I said in this earlier post, it would be handy if legislation
could deem when such people, let's call them victims, start feeling undue
pain, given how many taxpayers are interrogated and broken down in IRD’s
room 101 on the strength of it. And casting my eyes up from keyboard, I would
note my neighbour here has three cars, but the one next to that just the one,
so I’ll drop them a note to the effect Susan says simply take the excess one
from next door and even yourselves up a bit. (Don’t mention the war, though: referencing
that war fought for the free West based on property rights).
This
breath-taking advocacy of theft is something I will always find takes the wind
out of me.
My
suggestion is leave people to their own decisions and the retirement beds they
make with them. It’s the only way for a free society to exist, and it leads to
better outcomes. As further example, from the same article:
A higher tax on retirees is one
idea being floated in response to calls by Labour for the Government to sort
things out ahead of the impending boom in baby boomers.
All
I need do is point out, over and over and over, the contradictions leading to
the unintended consequences of government interventions in the voluntary
decisions of individuals.
Most
retirees should have their own mortgage free home: selling this down in size
and value, including to a licence-to-occupy in a retirement home, is probably
one of the main sources of retirement funding in New Zealand.
Unfortunately,
Labour has a stated policy of wanting to sacrifice retirees to first home
buyers by destroying the value in our housing stock, and thus the property
market. They have various nefarious ways of achieving this from capital gains
taxes through to restrictions on foreign buyers. I’ve written on this only last month, and in that post I stated New Zealand was fortunate to have a
solution to the baby-boomers selling their homes into a dwindling market to
fund their retirements, in the form of well-off foreigners wanting to bring
their life-long savings from their country of origin, to our country, to give
to Kiwi retirees for their homes and so fund their retirements. Labour's restrictions on foreign ownership would deny retirees this market.
So
Labour are at the same time stating the need to tax retirees to cover retirees
in retirement, while advocating policies that will destroy the single source
almost all retirees will have to fund their retirement with: their homes.
Politicians
– redistributors - just cannot help themselves. They seem to feel they have to
be seen doing something, and so we get this hotchpotch of nonsense legislation
marching out from the Fortress of Legislation with the iron fist of the state enforcing
it saluting in our faces even as it reaches into our pockets. The ethical
solution to the ‘problem’ of retirees is given by free markets, not redistribution.
And by the by, lets never confuse legislating with law-making.
Finally,
St Susan: this blasé attitude you have to my property, stop it please. You
wouldn’t instruct your kids to go steal from kids with more toys than they
have, because you know what type of adults such instruction would result in:
well don’t make a national policy out of precisely the same immorality. In
other words, and to all the people who have told me even over this last month by
tweet and email, that if I disagree so much with the statism that rules here,
why don’t I leave: no, thank you, I’m staying. Instead, why don’t you just grow
up?