Money is never idle. It is invested no matter where it is put. It must earn a return equal to or greater than the inflation rate. It is taxed twice, first as corporate income and then again when dispersed as dividends. Investors get hit twice. Capital flees from excessive taxation and regulation to less excessive tax situations. That is what created the need for offshore tax havens.
You wrote:
Originally Posted by rufus
That discretionary wealth is invested in our nations farms, factories and stores. Without that capital available, society cannot produce and distribute the goods we need. Who do you think buys all of that stock and bonds?
If the wealth goes to an offshore account or business it is unlikely to any good back home.
Is corporate income taxed or is it profits that are taxed?
Capital flees from poor returns, not from taxes alone. For example, capital flees from countries where wages are high to countries where wages are low.
