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509092
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Capital and Return
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Suppose that instead of our system of taxes, so complex, so burdensome, so annoying, which we
have inherited from the feudal nobility, a single tax should be established, not on production,
circulation, consumption, habitation, etc., but in accordance with the demands of justice and the
dictates of economic science, on the net capital falling to each individual. The capitalist, losing by taxation as much as or more than he gains by rent and interest, would be obliged either to use his property himself or to sell it; economic equilibrium again would be established by this simple and moreover inevitable intervention of the treasury department.
have inherited from the feudal nobility, a single tax should be established, not on production,
circulation, consumption, habitation, etc., but in accordance with the demands of justice and the
dictates of economic science, on the net capital falling to each individual. The capitalist, losing by taxation as much as or more than he gains by rent and interest, would be obliged either to use his property himself or to sell it; economic equilibrium again would be established by this simple and moreover inevitable intervention of the treasury department.
Suppose that instead of our system of taxes, so complex, so burdensome, so annoying, which we
have inherited from the feudal nobility, a single tax should be established, not on production,
circulation, consumption, habitation, etc., but in accordance with the demands of justice and the
dictates of economic science, on the net capital falling to each individual. The capitalist, losing by taxation as much as or more than he gains by rent and interest, would be obliged either to use his property himself or to sell it; economic equilibrium again would be established by this simple and moreover inevitable intervention of the treasury department.
have inherited from the feudal nobility, a single tax should be established, not on production,
circulation, consumption, habitation, etc., but in accordance with the demands of justice and the
dictates of economic science, on the net capital falling to each individual. The capitalist, losing by taxation as much as or more than he gains by rent and interest, would be obliged either to use his property himself or to sell it; economic equilibrium again would be established by this simple and moreover inevitable intervention of the treasury department.
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