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Comment by cyberax

6 months ago

> Given the choice, Amazon would rather spend 100% of its profits on itself

And why is this bad, exactly? Money will be spent and will go back into the economy. Amazon will have to use the funds to build new offices, datacenters, do research, whatever.

And even if execs give themselves $10^11 USD in bonuses, they will be taxed as personal income, at even higher rates than corporate income.

It is complex - is it better for the money to go back into the economy by paying high salaries to a specific group of highly-educated people? Or is it better for the money to go back into the economy through taxes, then disbursing the benefits to lower-income benefit programs?

I’m not sure what the answer is. The former is likely to drive some innovation, which I’m sure varies by company. Where the latter could also unlock innovation by giving the bottom-quartile of earners a chance to improve their situation.

  • Those salaries are also taxed, and at the highest tax brackets. The government may end up getting more revenue that way.

  • The answer is simple: it's the biggest growth generator in USA.

    Growth has its own problems of course (I don't want to estimate the health impact of Coca Cola), but it's a prerequisite of a country not falling behind others.

  • > It is complex - is it better for the money to go back into the economy by paying high salaries to a specific group of highly-educated people?

    Yes. Also, the salary will not go _only_ to highly-educated people. For example, if Amazon decides to build a new distribution center, it will employ blue-collar workers to build it, not software engineers.

    > Or is it better for the money to go back into the economy through taxes, then disbursing the benefits to lower-income benefit programs?

    No.

    > I’m not sure what the answer is.

    The answer is pretty clear: invest money into the private sector, rather than divert it into the Federal budget. Private actors are more efficient at allocating funds than the government.

    I'm not against social spending, it's a necessary evil for any real state. Pure libertarianism leads to dystopian outcomes. But it should be understood that it's a very real artificial inefficiency that is imposed on the economy.

    There are also situations where additional social spending is necessary, but they are VERY easy to detect: when your interest rate is near zero.