growstuff
But tax isn't redistributing if it takes a higher percentage from those who work most.
Well, that was my next train of thought!
In a capitalist society money flows upwards towards the people who profit from the supply of goods and services, while the domestic economy also depends on incentivising people to buy those goods and services. The upward flow of money could be controlled by limiting profits, but then it wouldn't be a capitalist society.
So tax has to be the method of redistribution of the money the state supplies.
The problem is that our tax system is skewed in favour of the profit makers, who use the power that money gives them to influence government tax policies in their favour. They don't stop to consider that tax policies that favour them can place a greater burden on the people who work to create the goods and services they profit from, and which they expect the non wealthy portion of society to buy in order to create their profits.
Adam Smith saw the problem. First:
No society can surely be happy and flourishing of which the far greater part of its members are poor and miserable. It is but equity, besides, that they who feed, clothe and lodge the whole body of the people, should have such a share of the produce of their own labour as to be themselves tolerably well fed, clothed and lodged
Then he says (can't find the actual quote ATM) that any proposals made by the profit takers to the government should be very carefully considered because they are acting for solely their own interests, not for the interests of society as a whole. I assume that Smith thinks that government should have the interests of all citizens at heart, not just the wealthy ones.
I think that Smith is far more concerned with a 'moral economy' than people think he is...
What I am trying to say is that in an ideal world, redistribution should enable people both to earn, and to earn enough to sustain, by spending their earnings, the capitalist society in which they live.
those who work most. Now there's a loaded concept! It could be debated for hours and hours...