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Date: | Thu, 3 Jun 2010 22:23:26 -0700 |
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Adam Smith supported mildly progressive taxation. Rothbard is quite critical of Smith over this.
I wrote about this in my PhD thesis (easily available online), where I show that Smith can be construed as even more progressive than Rothbard thought.
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Eric Schliesser
Bof Research Professor
Philosophy and moral Sciences,
Ghent university
Ghent, 9000, Belgium
Tel: (31)-(0)6-15005958
On 3 jun 2010, at 17:49, CARLOS RODRIGUEZ BRAUN <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
Among the old fallacies that have enjoyed a renaissance with the current economic crisis is the supposedly impeccable idea of taxing "the rich". I think that classical economists favoured in general indirect against direct taxes, and did not support a permanent income tax, and even less a progressive one. Can J.S.Mill stand as an exception? Was there an economist who supported progressive taxation in the classical period, or perhaps before?
Carlos Rodríguez Braun
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