marojejian 2 hours ago
OK, it's temping for me to make this comment about Vinod and perceptions of his past actions. But he's not important in the larger picture, and this issue definitely is.
Overall, we absolutely need to devote a lot of energy and discussion to this question now, since there are a lot of options, and building consensus and implementing anything smoothly will be slow. If we wait too long, we tempt disaster due to factors like unrest or missing the window of control. For example, the world is getting populist leaders now because we failed to address the inequality of growth in the last 30 years. So the more intelligent, powerful people raise this issue now, the better.
I'm not sure about each of these options yet. Definitely the change to capital gains makes sense (cough, OK I must gesture here at the carried interest rule for a moment...).
Sovereign wealth funds scare me. A fundamental approach where the government owns and directs capital sets up the wrong incentives. Over time, it risks privileging the elite, or at best the leviathan, over the median individual.
Rather, my gut is to pursue a broader distribution of wealth & power, e.g. by:
1) reducing the barriers to capital value, e.g. through promoting open source software, and eroding software IP
2) creating a systemic forcing function reducing inequality. The ideal one would be progressive wealth tax. Of course this is incredibly difficult in practice.
3) creating friction agains large corporations. this would need to be a totally new approach to antitrust. beyond eroding IP, I'm not sure of the best way to do this generally, even in ideal terms (perhaps progressive taxes on capital value appreciation?)