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Tom Bilyeu
Mom, can you tell me a story?
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Tom Bilyeu
Was she brave?
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Tom Bilyeu
Did she have to fight a dragon?
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Tom Bilyeu
Was it scary?
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Tom Bilyeu
Did the car have a sunroof?
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It did, actually.
Tom Bilyeu
Okay, good story.
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Tom Bilyeu
The most emotional economist in the world, Gary's Economics is going to tell us why wealth taxes are good.
Guest Economist
Okay, welcome back to Gary's Economics. Today we are going to talk about why the economist hates wealth taxes and
Tom Bilyeu
why Gary loves them.
Guest Economist
I have recently been interested in sort of what the intelligentsia are thinking about wealth taxes because they are currently the primary blocker of wealth taxes.
Tom Bilyeu
Thank the Lord. Never did I think I would come to the aid of the intelligentsia. But if they really are the ones blocking this, I'm here for it.
Guest Economist
So I really wanted to know what the economists were saying. I knew they were going to be
Tom Bilyeu
anti wealth taxes because they like to see people prosper.
Guest Economist
There's two articles in there about wealth taxes and I found the arguments given like incredibly, incredibly interesting. All right, so yeah, there's two articles in there. They don't really give much argument against wealth taxes, but I want to go through everything they they say specifically about wealth taxes. So the first thing they have is a very short sentence which says wealth taxes would become confiscatory and deter in true. And then they, they refer to like a larger article at the back of the magazine. And if you go to that larger article, to be honest, there's like almost nothing in it. It just says the exact same thing. The costs of deterring innovation are now
Tom Bilyeu
in his defense, if they aren't making argumentation, then this is pointless. If you've got people that are on my side of the fence saying, hey, there's cause and effect here. The reason that you don't want to get into wealth tax is it actually breaks the economy, which it does, but they just want you to feel your way through the issue. It's bad, it's. You're confiscating things. Nobody's ever going to be persuaded by that. People are not being realistic about the fact that we live in a very populist moment, which means everybody's reasoning by emotion. And so if we're ever going to have any chance of winning this argument, we actually have to make the points. Now I find Gary and we're going to watch him do it or not do it. I actually haven't seen this clip yet, but he's either going to come at you with an emotional argument or he's actually going to lay out his cause and effect historically. Gary will give you the very beginning of an argument and followed by, it doesn't feel right, people aren't going to like it, it's not going to work. And then he'll stop at that rather than offering, okay, what exactly are you going to do? Why is it going to work? And so let's see if the Economist also fails us, there's then fuck them as well.
Guest Economist
But I really want to focus on the one specific thing they said next, which I found to be really, really interesting, which is this little bit at the end of the article.
Tom Bilyeu
So wait, he's going to move past their actual claims onto something else.
Guest Economist
Let's see what this, where it says, the tax system must ensure that meritocracy prevails over inheritocracy, broader based inheritance taxes. And when I heard this, I found this incredibly interesting and I'll explain why. So in the last like one year, I've been doing a lot of basically lobbying of kind of fancy people, politicians, economists, academics, tax lawyers, trying to convince them to do wealth taxes. And this exact argument which the Economist makes here in this week's edition, that no, we definitely shouldn't do wealth taxes. And it's very, very clear in this article and in previous articles they published that they're very anti wealth taxes. This idea that we shouldn't do wealth taxes, but we should do more inheritance taxes is an idea that I find so interesting and has come up a couple of times in the conversations that I've had with sort of powerful sort of influencers in the political world here in the uk. And every time I've heard somebody say to me, are we definitely he's going
Tom Bilyeu
to say something like this is a wealth tax. And I swear to God, if he cannot navigate the difference between a wealth tax when you're dead and a wealth tax when you're alive, I'm going to lose my.
Guest Economist
We definitely shouldn't do wealth taxes, but what I really want us to do is more inheritance taxes. I find it like an incredibly interesting line of argument to take. And in order to understand why it's so interesting, you basically need to understand what wealth taxes are and why wealth taxes are so important in our current economy. So the difference between a wealth tax and an income tax is income taxes tax you on the money you make every year, whereas wealth taxes tax you on the stock of wealth that you have. And the reason that they're so important in the current tax system is our current tax system as it is literally hasn't said anything, is very effective at taxing primarily high earning workers. So if you are making your money from your work and you're earning a lot of money, you're probably paying wealth. Gary, you know, 50 or even, even 60 at the moment. The highest marginal rate of tax in the.
Tom Bilyeu
One of the big problems is, and if he doesn't define this, this is going to be maddening. People do not understand the difference between income and wealth. And Gary is so far doing nothing to explain the difference. And this is exactly where it breaks. Now, I'm not for inheritance taxes. It's already been taxed. We'll see how he ends up addressing that. But this is where this gets maddening. You've got to define your terms. You've got to explain why taxing income makes sense and why taxing wealth doesn't make sense, why those two things are not the same and why taxing or one is easy enough to do and why taxing the other is absolutely detrimental to the economy. Now, overtaxing either is stupid. But if you don't delineate between the different forms of I'm sure what you want to call it, one is literally, I've got this thing coming in as tangible, it's in my hand. The other is theoretical. Wealth is theoretical. It is not a real thing that you have. Which is exactly why trying to tax it is so maddening.
Guest Economist
So we're aggressively taxing high earners. But we are.
Tom Bilyeu
Because it's real. You actually have it. It's money.
Guest Economist
Really not effectively taxing. The very rich people have enormous amounts of assets at all.
Tom Bilyeu
So which is insane and stupid and we should stop doing immediately.
Guest Economist
Health taxes really are the only tax that has the power to really rebalance the current very unfair tax system. I think if you, if you look at Zucman's work he talks about, ordinary workers are paying 50%, billionaires paying 20% wealth taxes because they tax your stock of wealth rather than just your income every year.
Tom Bilyeu
Gary, here's a question. Can you tax an asset without selling the asset?
Guest Economist
Very rich people don't get their money from working. And because we have a tax system that is largely based around taxing work based income.
Tom Bilyeu
Do say why it's unfair, please.
Guest Economist
This is very important within the context of what is currently happening to the wealth distribution in our economies, in our societies, which is most groups of society, poor people, average people and even higher earning individuals are getting poorer, governments are getting poorer, ordinary people are holding less wealth, governments are holding less wealth, and all of that wealth is being accumulated by the way.
Tom Bilyeu
So if, because he's not saying any more words about it, if what he's saying is the very thing that would make it a, a fair tax system is you're charging workers 50% and then you're charging, which by the way, you're not. The vast majority of people in England pay no taxes. And a very similar thing here in the U.S. in the U.S. 50% of people pay 3% of the taxes. So when you have a progressive tax system, what ends up happening is the tax base ends up being paid by the wealthy people. So the people that are getting taxed at 50%, they're not your person that's struggling to make ends meet. So that's already something that he's not talking about. But if he were putting forward, hey, let's just be fair because equal percentage, that's fair. So that's actually one of the changes to tax code the world over that actually I would understand if people were putting forward. Everybody just needs to pay 20% or 25% or whatever it is and just everybody pays it. And we're not doing a progressive tax system and we're not letting there be loopholes and we want to shut all that down and we want to make sure that everybody pays their quote, unquote, fair share. Great, great. Put one flat tax. Don't let anybody out of it. But of course, nobody, nobody except maybe, I don't know if Thomas Massey or Rand Paul would get behind something like that, but you're not going to hear a lot of people put that forward,
Guest Economist
almost completely avoid tax. And this is very important within the context of what is currently happening to the wealth distribution in our economies in our societies, which is most Groups of society, poorer people, average people, and even higher earning individuals are getting poorer. Governments are getting poorer.
Tom Bilyeu
What's the mechanism? Governments are getting poorer. Gary, you're gonna have to explain that one. What the fuck are you talking about? Okay, so that's the first just outright mad thing. So if you're talking about tax revenue that's actually being collected, certainly in the US for every new dollar in tax that we spend, we spend. Sorry, every new tax dollar that we bring in, we spend 1:58. If you're saying that that's the government getting poorer, that's the government getting poorer because they have horrific spending policies, not because they just, oh my God, you've got so many rich people and they're dodging their taxes. That's not what's happening. The US government, and I'm sure it's very similar in the UK, but the US government has almost doubled. It's like 94% of the almost doubled their tax base in the last 10 years. In the last 10 years, the last decade, we have almost doubled the amount that the government is collecting. That shit is wild. In what way, Gary? Please state the way, because I know, I'm sure it feels like governments are getting poorer, but the reality is on the ground, the governments are getting richer and richer by the second because they are collecting more and more and more taxes. Like a morbidly obese person who is screaming for more calories. I need more calories. I need more calories. The reality is you don't need more calories. You need to spend your money wisely. You need to spend your money wisely. That is where governments are falling on their face.
Guest Economist
Less wealth. And all of that wealth is being accumulated amongst the richest people in our society.
Tom Bilyeu
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The tax code already gives you the advantage. Trumed shows you how to use it. Go to trumed.com impact and check what qualifies. It takes just a couple of minutes. That's T R U e m e d.com/truMed is for qualified customers. HSA, FSA, tax savings are going to vary. Thanks for sticking around. Let's get right back into the action again. He's not telling you what the difference between income and wealth is. So if you want the government to get more wealthy, now what you're talking about is you want a sovereign wealth fund. You want the government to own assets which are going to be volatile, which are going to go up and down. You have to be very careful what you end up putting into the, the sovereign wealth fund. If you have, like, natural resources and you want to do something like that, I can sort of see an argument for that. And you can look at the countries that have done that and what they end up looking like. It does not look like a highly innovative society, but there are certainly places where they have done this well and they're able to use the sovereign wealth fund as a way to push the tax burden down. They still have not created the US which is the most dynamic economy on the world, which is even now, even as we abuse people with our monetary policy policy, it is still the place that everyone around the world invests the majority of their dollars. Do not let anybody fool you. You do not have a bunch of money flooding into China, which is tied or just second or just first in terms of size of the economy. They're absolutely massive. But people are super paranoid to put their money in because the government controls everything. So what he's saying is we want the government to control more, even though that tends to push further foreign investment for sure away from it, because people don't want the government to be able to control the assets. Why? Because the government has proven time and time again all throughout human history that they are the worst capital allocators of all time. You don't want to give your wealth over to the person who raises a dollar and spends $1.58. It is so obviously stupid. If you had a friend that did that, for every dollar that they made working, they spent $1.58, you'd be like, I have this financially irresponsible friend. I, I love him, I want good things for him, but damn, he cannot manage his money. And yet that is what the governments do. And he wants to see them aggregate more of the country's wealth. It's so crazy. I get why that feels like the right thing. My core argument against Gary, because originally I had a really sort of soft spot in my heart for him because he's capturing the way that people feel. He's able to mirror back to people. I get why you're suffering. I get why you feel the way you feel. You should be mad and you should be mad. But he is either unable or unwilling to tell people the mechanism by which the economy has been broken. And just so I don't fall into Gary territory, the way that the economy has been broken is very simple. It is, you create a central bank. That central bank creates a wealth pump mechanism by which through money printing, driven by deficit spending, you end up robbing people of their purchasing power through, through the ability to print money so the dollars in their bank account don't go down, but what they can buy with those dollars does go down. And the only people that are protected from it because the wealth is literally being pumped somewhere. So where is that somewhere? It gets pumped into assets. And so this is why he's so desperate to tax the value of those assets instead of solving the problem of, of this wealth mechanism that transfers wealth from everybody. Because the wealthy, everybody, everybody, the poor, the wealthy, the middle class, all, everybody alike gets taxed by inflation. But only asset holders are able to escape some amount of that punishment. And so the reality is, what he should be saying is, hey, either get rid of that, stop deficit spending, stop money printing, get rid of the central bank, go back to sound currency, or, or if we don't want to do that because we like the lubricant of money being able to be printed out of thin air and put into the system, which does have its upside, but it creates the ability to do this wealth pump, then we've got to, at a minimum, stop deficit spending. We've got to make sure that we are not causing inflation through the mechanism of money printing. Now you're still going to get inflation in other ways. I do not want to spiral out of control, but if anybody wants to push back, trust me, there are other ways that the government can create inflation, but those at least have some upsides in the economy. But this is where this is somebody who's walking you through an emotional appeal. He has not yet given you any cause and effect whatsoever. He's not saying, okay, this is the mechanism by which we expect people to liquidate their assets so that we can tax them. He's not saying the real reason that you have a K shaped economy and some people are doing so poorly is, is because of deficit spending and inflation, which is a man made disease that is quite literally designed to be a hidden tax. He's not saying any of that. He just knows that people are mad at the wealthy because they need Someone to blame. And that's an easy visible target.
Audience Member
I got a quick thing in the
Guest Economist
chat about that, please.
Audience Member
Capitalism, stock market, it's built on growth. Even the US we need a 3% GDP growth every year in order to show growth in positive direction. Some people say that 2% inflation target, although it's man made, although it's not real, it's something we shouldn't do. It's crucial for us to have that 3% growth every year.
Tom Bilyeu
Because if you really want to be in the complexity. Okay, cool. Yeah, so it isn't crucial, but it is extremely useful for lubricating the economy for something called the velocity of money. So Japan is the perfect example of what happens when your velocity of money is it's not zero, but it's very, very low. So almost 40 years, Japan has just been stagnant, meaning whatever you were getting paid at your job, if you were making $100,000 a year, 40 years later you're still making $100,000 but bread is still the same price. So it's just stagnant. So if you've ever been to Japan, Japan is beautiful, it's wonderful, it's incredible country. And so you can have a stagnant economy and still be in a wonderful place. Now it's very different. You're not going to get the level of innovation, you're not going to get a dynamic economy, you're not going to get money moving around. And so you're not going to start broke and one day end up being rich. And so you don't get what the US gets. The US gets Silicon Valley where the company or each company is fighting for the employees and you've got anthropic stealing the best employees from OpenAI. And so can we build something better? And, and the world wins because there's so much competition in those companies, both for employees and to make a better product and to win over the consumer. Money's going around everywhere. One person can aggregate it like Elon Musk and they can do all this incredible innovative stuff, which they're only able to do because they're able to aggregate capital both by winning in the marketplace, meaning I make a better product and therefore I'm able to make more money. And then with those profitable dollars, I'm able to aim them at something new. And on the actual stock market, people watch what I'm doing and they're so inspired that they want to own shares in my company, which allows me to raise money from the public markets. And now I can aggregate even More capital and grow even faster. Japan doesn't have that. Japan is stagnant. So once the world started basically exporting their inflation to Japan by saying, oh, you buy this thing from us? Well, COVID 19 took our costs up and so we had massive inflation. The US has had 30% inflation in the last six years. So it's like, yeah, if Japan is buying stuff from us, it's going to be roughly 30% more expensive. So now it's all falling apart in Japan. So a stagnant economy is an economy that's at risk, high risk. Even if emotionally you can stomach being flat. If you're not careful, you run into stagflation, which is wages aren't going up, but the price of bread is. And so that's a disaster zone. Japan is now in danger of finding itself there. So they're actually starting to inflate. People are getting raises. The Yen, unfortunately, is weakening. They're having a liquidity crisis. All kinds of weird things are starting to happen to Japan. But if you understand how all of this works and you can keep the inflation working so that it's like, okay, we as a government are going to create new money at a disproportionate rate of 2 to 3% compared to the value that's being created by our entrepreneurs. So the debt being taken on the free, cheap, easy money, which is the thing that causes inflation. So that free, cheap, easy money, we want them to use it to make productive things. So when Elon Musk uses it to start a new company, that both creates starlink that people are paying huge amounts of money for, and they're desperate for it. They love it. Great product. This is incredible. So now it's given people more things to buy. So new money has come in to the economy. But instead of chasing the same goods, which is definitionally inflation, it's now chasing more goods. And so you may be like, I didn't even know that they created more money because everything costs the same. What costs the same? Because he created a new thing for people to buy. So that new money, instead of competing for the same loaves of bread, it's now the same amount of people are competing for the loaves of bread with the same amount of money. But there's this new thing with the new money that they're going after. Now what the government tries to do is only introduce new money such that it eats through all the innovation. So they steal all of that because things should get cheaper over time. But the greatest psyop ever pulled on the world is to convince them that deflation is bad. Deflation is amazing. You should want deflation, just not crisis led deflation. Which is what happened to Japan where velocity of money dropped because everyone was like, no matter how much money you pump into the economy, we're not going to spend it, we're going to save it, we're going to pay down debt. And so Japan's like, no matter how much money we make available for effectively zero percent interest, we can't stimulate inflation. We can't get the positive side of inflation going. So the government with inflation at 2 to 3% as a target is that's actually a lie. They're eating all of those positive deflationary things coming from innovation and technology plus 2 or 3%. And so they're saying, I'm going to add just enough money over the new goods to take from you an additional 2 to 3%. Now in doing that, you get punished for saving. When you're punished for saving, you spend. And so when you spend, you create velocity of money. Now you create the ability for an entrepreneur to come in and be like, well, you're going to spend the money, so now I want you to spend it with me. But the reason you're spending that money is twofold. I made something you wanted. And two, subconsciously, because most people don't understand it consciously, but subconsciously, you know, you can't save your way to success because the government is inflating it all away. It's all knowable. It's just confusing enough though that people think for literally my entire life, I thought inflation just happened. I thought it was a law of nature, like seasons change, inflation happens. Literally. I never thought about it. It just, that was my default assumption. Once you understand the cause and effect of it, you can eject out of Gary's emotional read on the situation and be like, what are we actually trying to do here? Because there is the Elon Musk is winning. And if we think Elon is winning too hard and we really don't like it, then ask, why is Elon a trillionaire? Like, why? There was a day where being worth $100,000 was like being worth a billion dollars. But inflation happens and suddenly $100,000, not very interesting. You got to be a millionaire. And there was a day where being a millionaire was like being a trillionaire. And then it was like, well, inflation made a million not very cool. Then it was like, well, you had to be a billionaire. And now we've just pushed it to a trillionaire. But the Real question is the gap between the wealthiest person and the poorest person. That gap causes blood in the streets, pitchforks, revolutions. All of that is caused by the human propensity for you have more than me and I'm full of resentment. And so I'm going to burn all of this down because I don't like you having more than me. It is a person who they are locked in insecurity around economics. This is a populist moment. So populism is when people reason by emotion. This is why Gary is so big in a populist moment. He reasons emotionally so he resonates with people who are reasoning emotionally. But they could eject out of that and say okay, why is Elon getting so rich? And I'm not what's really going on? And what's really going on is the inflationary cycle. So it has this positive element. But governments always get abusive, always. And so they will end up inflating too much. And it isn't 2 or 3% to keep the money moving, it's a 30% that they try to disguise. And so that's when this just ends up being hyper disastrous. Which is where we're at now, where you've got a guy who is creating a ton of value for people, which is part of why he's getting rich. But he's also on the right side of the wealth stealing siphon that is money printing.
Audience Member
There is a level of. Because I'm looking at it from the Gini coefficient, I'm looking at it from monkeys with grapes and cucumbers. And I think that while yes, inflation running away is the reason that I make $100,000, my neighbor makes $100,000 but they're moving into a bigger house and I'm moving into, I'm downsizing because they put $30,000 into stock market, I put $30,000 under my mattress. I understand while that why that is happening, but I do think that when it comes to somebody like Elon and you start to get to that massive amount of wealth, you Elon to the second richest person is further than the poorest person to the. You know what I mean? So it's like there is a certain level and I'm not even getting to the fact that the NASDAQ a hundred rules were changed, the IPO liquidity rate was changed, the 15 day trading limit, all these things that were financially incentivized to remove guardrails restrictions, all these things to allow the SpaceX IPO to get to that level. We can't act like if we just balance the budget, the Gini coefficient will
Tom Bilyeu
reset or if we really can. So here's the thing. If you want to be mad at Elon for getting wealthy, you have to look at what part of his wealth is quote unquote his fault and what part of it is the fault of the policies that we vote for. So anybody that wants to get mad at Elon, there's actually he recently gave you two things that you should rightly be very angry about. One, you should rightly be very angry about. One, you need to keep a close eye, but it could be sinister. And so the first one is money in politics. So he threw hundreds of millions of dollars to get what he wanted politically. Now he's not the only one. Tons of people do it on both sides of the aisle. It's despicable and we should as a society have a zero tolerance policy for that. So if you want to be mad at Elon on that, I'm right there with you. The second thing that he did that may be good, but it could be catastrophic is when he did the IPO. He has the SpaceX IPO. I think he's almost certainly under reporting how expensive the infrastructure build out for AI is going to be, that the actual life cycle of the chips, which is the most expensive part of the AI infrastructure build out is going to end up being something that's a two to three year time horizon and he's clocking it at like five to six. That discrepancy hides, if Michael Burry is correct, it hides like 170 plus billion dollar loss. And so, and that might be industry wide, it might not just be Elon's company, that might be AI in totality to, to be very clear. But if that's true and all the AI companies are basically cooking the books a bit and then they're using this IPO as exit liquidity to basically run the 2008 which was oh, the banks all recognize we've got this really shaky debt situation building with AI infrastructure build out because the revenue is not coming in as quickly as we expected. And so now like every revolutionary technology before AI, the first wave of investors might get wiped out. But they're savvy and they know that historical example. So they're like, we would much prefer the second wave of investors be the ones that get wiped out. So let's ipo, which by the way the IPO is hyper late, which we can blame government regulatory burdens for this because we should have made it so that these Companies want to IPO much earlier, but they don't, they want to stay private much longer because the regulatory burden is so disgusting. But I'll set that aside for a second. So it's very possible, though I'm not a mind reader, but it's very possible that that's like bad thing number two that Elon is doing where it's like he's using the retail investor who does not understand the historical example, nor does he see through to what Michael Burry is banging the drum about, which is they could have a much bigger loss here than you think they do, which means you may need to be holding these shares for much longer for you to reap the benefits. So not necessarily. If you've got a 10 year time horizon or a 20 year time horizon, you might win big, big, but you might not. And so that one, like, I've got my eyes on it now. If all of the investors end up making money, then it's like, well, he just did humanity a huge service because he made this available. Like you had index funds changing their rules to let more retail investors in again, could break absolutely sinister or could break like, holy shit, you just made a lot of people extraordinarily wealthy that otherwise wouldn't have been able to do. The reason I'm sort of on the fence about it is, is that Elon only gets paid if he is insanely successful. And he has a historical example of being insanely successful of doing something that people thought there's no way he could do this. And so given that he's riding with everybody, all of that wealth that people are saying that he has, like, that's all tied up and he makes the stock perform so they're only floating like 5% of the company. So all of the, like, Elon is a trillionaire and all that. It's all make believe. It's all a projection of like, well, if he pulls it off, then yes, he'll end up being worth a trillion or more, but he's got to pull it off first. And that's why it drives me absolutely fucking insane when you've got someone like Gary or anybody banging the drum about a wealth tax, saying tax this guy, as if he has already pulled it off and has sold the shares and has them sitting, the dollars sitting in his bank account. None of which is true. He hasn't pulled it off. So it's not actually, you know, going to equal that for him. And if he started selling, the price would drop, so he wouldn't be able to realize it anyway, which he would have to do in order to pay the tax. So it's like again, when you try to map this to cause and effect, all of Gary's arguments fall away. When you try to map it to. I'm looking at Elon, he's a trillionaire, because I don't understand the difference between wealth and income. And now I'm mad because I'm the guy who's making a hundred thousand dollars and I'm not the one that's getting rich because I don't understand assets. And so I'm just like, what the fuck? Okay, so those are the two things if you want to be mad at Elon. One, you can just be angry money in politics. The other, if you have a skeptical eye, I'm right there with you. I have a very skeptical eye. I worry that they are using retail as a way to de risk and they are pushing the risk on to people that are less savvy. Now I think people should have to be responsible for themselves and thinking through it. But I still wouldn't smile upon him if that's what he's actually doing. Okay, now the part that people aren't mad about, that part, they don't even fucking understand it. The part that they are mad about is that he is worth a trillion dollars. Now, they don't understand those are shares. Most of them are locked up. He couldn't, wouldn't sell them now even if he wanted to. And so that's all just a bunch of people speculating on what that would be if he could sell 100 of his ownership right now, today, which he can't. So if people understood that number only spirals up to a trillion dollars in value because of deficit spending and money printing, otherwise the value of the shares would stay much more reasonable. He's getting like 100x on his profit ratio, so. Or revenue ratio might even be worse. Revenue. But like, it is absolute insanity. It's, it's a historic. This is not normally the kind of valuations that people get. So normally SpaceX would be valued at a much lower number. And so why isn't it? Well, part of it is Elon's track record of success. So people are just excited. So you've got a lot of people that want in because they're convinced he's going to be able to pull off another miracle. And then you've got the deficit spending money printing, which artificially makes $100,000 become a million, become a billion become a trillion. And so that thing Elon has Nothing to do with that. Is the government acting a fool for I mean since 1913, but really accelerated since the dot com crash in 2000. Got on everybody's radar in 2008 and then Covid was just absurdity.
Audience Member
Yeah, technically 70s when we decoupled from gold. But I get you.
Tom Bilyeu
Well, so 71 is a slightly different problem. So 71 said, hey, let's make it possible for people to abuse the system that started in 1913, became completely unhinged in 1971, but the actual time where they abused it started in 2000. We're hitting pause for a moment, but there's plenty more ahead, so don't go anywhere. Let's talk about longevity. I'm not talking about living longer in theory. I'm talking about actually building the cellular foundation that makes performance sustainable for decades. If you know me, you know I am obsessed with with longevity and with performance. I think about what I eat, what I drink, what I do every day that compounds positively over time. That's why I'm a fan of Nandica from peak. It's like the Rolls Royce of coffee alternatives for longevity. It's got full spectrum Reishi, one of the most studied longevity mushrooms on the planet, combined with fermented pu erh tea from 250 year old trees and ceremonial grade cacao. So if you're serious about upgrading your energy and thinking in decades instead of days, check out Nandica. Get 20% off at peak life.com/ that's P I Q U E life.com/ we'll be right back to the show. But first let's talk about a number that should concern you. Data breaches have increased 211% and in a single year. And every breach means more of your personal data. Your address, your phone number, your Social Security number. It ends up on data broker sites where anyone can buy it. The question isn't whether your data is out there, it is the question is whether you're doing anything about it. That's where Incogni comes in. They track down your data across hundreds of sites and remove it automatically. You authorize them once, that's it, they handle everything else. Plus with custom removals, you send them any link where your information shows up and their team is going to take it down. The threat is growing. Incogni is the response that grows with it. Go to incogni.com impact and use code impact for 60% off an annual plan. Try it risk free for 30 days. Now let's get back to the show. Let's Talk about why selling online marketplaces feels so broken today. 20 years ago, you were selling to a person. You knew them, you knew what they liked. You could set things aside for them. But the algorithm has flattened all of that out. Now you're just a listing in a sea of listings competing on price, hoping someone scrolls past at the right second. The person to person model might be dead, but Whatnot is making shopping great again. Whatnot is the largest live shopping marketplace in the country. Sellers go live, show their products in real time, take questions, and build real relationships with buyers. Sellers on whatnot move 10 times more product than on other major marketplaces. And the number of people making over a million dollars a year on this platform has doubled. Buyers spend more than an hour a day in the app. That's not just random browsing. That is people developing a real relationship with, with the app. Beauty, collectibles, electronics, luxury, fashion, even cookies. Every category, real businesses are being built in real time on Whatnot. Download the Whatnot app today and get free shipping on your first order. Just search wh a t n o t whatnot in the app store and start scoring amazing deals right now. Thanks for sticking around. Let's get right back into the action.
Audience Member
All right, let's get through his next point.
Tom Bilyeu
Let's go, Gary.
Guest Economist
That we can get wealth back into the hands of ordinary families. And the economist essentially recognized this in, in what it says. It says that the tax system must ensure that meritocracy prevails over inheritocracy. So this is the system that, that we're in, Gary.
Tom Bilyeu
The very, very rich already pay when they get income. Now there's one loophole that everybody points to, which is it's borrow something, die. I forget borrow, don't pay back, die. Something like that. If people wanted to close that loophole where if you are borrowing against your assets that you have to pay that loan back, cool. I would have no beef with that. But that would be a sensible way to approach this. But a, an illogical, emotional way to approach this would just be like, well, the estimates are that you're worth this, so we're going to tax you on that. Even if you don't actually have the ability to get a hold of those funds. That's where this gets ridiculous. So the thing with wealthy people is they usually have made enough money. Like, I haven't taken money out of impact theory. I just reinvest all my money back into impact theory. So I haven't made money as an individual in 10 years. It's because I Already have plenty of money to live on. But I paid tax. When I did sell that money or when I sold my company, I paid a massive untold millions of dollars. So I'm like, hold on, I paid. When I got the wealth that I can now live on, I paid tax, a massive amount of tax. So that's where it gets very frustrating, where people act like because you don't need to make the money now that you are secretly making all this money. I mean, I guess in theory, as impact theory goes up in value, I am getting richer. But it's like I haven't taken any money out of that. I put all the money back into the company so I can hire more people, so I can build more stuff. And so yeah, that's where this gets to.
Audience Member
It's the Steve Jobs loophole. I get paid from Apple $1. I get paid in shares. And then with those shares, I borrow $100,000 a year against the bank and my interest rate is 1%. I am going to make 3% with my stock staying in Apple, naturally, based on the artificial inflation that is coming from the government. So I make enough to pay back that loan every year. So I'm getting $100,000 quote, unquote tax free every year. Well, if he's for example, that's a rough example.
Tom Bilyeu
The only part of that that people have to remember is whatever money he takes out to actually pay the interest he's getting taxed on. Now, um, I need to look deeper at this, but at a cursory glance I read this article that was talking about this. The idea that wealthy people could borrow money and then never pay it back. And then when they die and they pass it on to their kids, it's known as a step up in basis. So the kids are judged from, well, what are all the assets worth today? And they only pay tax as it goes up from there. And so people are like, hold on, that's a loophole. But the reality is it doesn't seem like many people actually do that because debt puts you in such a vulnerable position because if your collateral goes down in value, the bank can call the loan. And so I. My instinct right now based on reading that information, is that not a lot of people actually do that because truly the mechanisms of debt are very dangerous. And so it's far more likely that these guys take the loan to aggregate the capital. And then in moments where their equity is worth a lot, they sell, pay down the debt. And in times where their equity isn't worth a lot, then they're going to ride out the loan. And so they're always looking. You can see this where it's like, Mark Zuckerberg just lost $84 billion in value. So you can imagine on that day he's not going to sell anything, take it out and pay off his debt. That's where he's going to be like, oh, is the economy in distress? Are interest rates coming down? Because the economy is in distress and they're trying to stimulate it with low interest rates. That's what I'm going to borrow. That's not going to be when I pay back. I'm going to pay back. When it's like, oh, everything's pumping to the moon now I'm able to sell my shares at a, you know, maybe all time high. I pay off that debt. The debt feels very cheap to me. So. But when he does that, which he is almost certainly going to do because doing everything on debt forever is so high risk that because if you're doing all that and you're debt laden and you drop by 84 billion, the banks might be like, yo, motherfucker, like, hey, you need to pay up. And this is how people jump off the Empire state building in 1929 because they're like, oh shit, I've just got what's called margin called I now have nothing left. The bank has already taken all of my assets. So anyway, the likelihood that these ultra wealthy people actually cycle through and are paying off and therefore paying interest when they sell is basically 100%. And Elon has said no one has ever paid more tax in history than him. So it's like the very guy you're like somehow saying has not paid his fair share is the largest taxpayer in all of human history. So what are we saying exactly? It's wild.
Audience Member
Let's jump to 12:30. Because he talks about innovation.
Guest Economist
So this is why I simply cannot understand. I was really quite amazed to see the economists go with this, right? They're saying, look, we want to tax the very rich more, but we absolutely don't want it to be a wealth tax. We want it to be an inheritance tax. Now every single penny or pound that the very rich own now will be inherited. That is what that is. What the.
Tom Bilyeu
Gary, are you really that dumb? There's no way he's that dumb. I mean, maybe he is, man. Maybe he just does not understand the economy. Despite the name, it is entirely possible that what you have in Gary's economics is a trader who's good at a certain type of trade he understands how inflation works and so he's gone and made a bunch of money on that. But he's never actually taken the time to figure out how all of economics works. Like even I am haunted by one truth. As the shore of my knowledge grows. Sorry. As the island of my knowledge grows, so grows the shore of my ignorance. And it's like you realize how little you actually know. Like if I compare myself to Scott Besant, he'll run rings around me. This is a guy that can actually go collapse a country's that he collapsed the pound. I mean it's crazy like that kind of knowledge of how economies. And I'm sure he will do it to more places. So it's like there, there really are levels to this shit, as they say. But the fact that Gary actually believes that every dollar of wealth, remember he's never taken the time to delineate wealth from income, that every dollar of wealth will be inherited. He doesn't know that if there's an economic downturn, your wealth gets brutalized. You can on a single day lose wealth, 10% of your wealth easily. And so if you happen to die in a downturn, your kids will not inherit that. So they'll inherit whatever it's worth the day you die. And then they are taxed if it goes up from there. And so there is a very real thing that happens, that step up in basis. That, that part I understand. Like if we really want to have a mechanistic conversation and say, I don't like this step up in basis. And so we want to double tax people. And by the way, it would be double taxed because people have already paid taxes on the money that they use to buy those assets or they themselves created the value, at which point it should be taxed as not ordinary income, but as capital gains. Because you took a risk, you did all that stuff. And then you need to reward entrepreneurs for doing that because the vast majority of entrepreneurs will fail. They will lose money over time, they won't make money. And so Given that reality, 94% of all companies fail to make 10 million doll in revenue revenue, not profit revenue. So if 94% of companies fail, bro, you've got to do something to incentivize people, otherwise they're just not going to fucking do it. And by the way, something I never hear Gary talk about, when Karl Marx comes into existence and starts talking about communism. There's no limited liability company. So companies literally are only founded by wealthy people. Because if your company went under, you were personally liable. So Only people who had enough wealth that they could survive the death of that company being sold, sued over whatever. Only people that were like, okay, well this is only 10% of my net worth that I'm putting at risk. So cool, I'll start this company. So it's like every company was started by rich people. So I understand why people get bitter. As a non rich person who started a company and got rich, I'm telling you, it's not how it works today. Specifically because of limited liability companies made possible by his country. So that whole thing like completely changed the landscape where anybody could start a company. Never more so than today with AI. And so it's like these are solutions for a time gone by that doesn't make any sense. Anyway, that was all to say that you want that income taxed at capital gains. And so if people are going to say, okay, listen, dear wealthy person who you just pass things on to your kid, things that you already paid tax on, we're not going to tax. But if, because you've already paid tax, but if you're going to give them something when you die and let them inherit something you haven't paid tax on yet, we're not giving them the step up in basis, but we are going to give them the capital gains treatment.
Wise Advertiser
Word.
Audience Member
Cool.
Tom Bilyeu
Now the capital gains is being paid on that from zero, right from $1. Whenever they started gaining, I would totally get that. I would have no beef, me passing that on to my kids and being like, well, you're still going to pay tax on it the way I would have had I lived. Awesome. But that's not what they're talking about.
Audience Member
I want to get through this innovation section. Let's keep going.
Guest Economist
Or very rich people do with all of their money. Their wealth never goes down. All of it goes to their kids.
Tom Bilyeu
What are you talking about?
Guest Economist
If you as the economy are saying, listen, wealth tax is terrible, you know they're going to. What is it? They say they're going to deter innovation. They're going to take money from the.
Tom Bilyeu
Why is he laughing?
Guest Economist
Seizing the assets of economy's most productive people.
Carvana Advertiser
Yes.
Guest Economist
How can you in one breath say that taxing the rich 2% every year is going to destroy the economy?
Tom Bilyeu
Let me answer that question, Gary. The way that you say it is, building a company is ridiculously hard. Governments are absolutely terrible at allocating capital. And so all of modern life is predicated on a very, very, very small subset of people who not only have the appetite but for risk to take on building a company. But actually have the ability to end up in that 6% of people that have companies that make $10 million or more. And by the way, the way that we do things now is not by at least not always showing up with a gun and just confiscating people's wealth like maybe we did in Venezuela. But you're going in and you're telling companies, hey, you can get rid or you're telling an individual you can go get rich by adding value to society. That is how we've gotten to the modern era. That is how we have solved many of the biggest health challenges. For instance, is people understand that they can go build this thing that's of value to people and they can get rich doing it. So they solve the hardest problems that we're facing. The fastest way to earn a billion dollars. This is like straight out of Peter Diamandis book. The fastest way to make a billion dollars is to help a billion people like go solve a problem that they really care about and they really want solved. That's how you're going to generate wealth again because of the limited liability companies, we create this ability for people to do it. So when you disincentivize that, then all of a sudden people go, well, if I want to get rich, I have to go steal it. And that's why countries would go and just try to conquer their neighboring countries to get things from them. Instead of building value and going as a country, we're going to let the free market reign and we're going to take some tax dollars off that. And that is literally how America became wealthy. So they let companies build things that our country wanted, the world wanted. That meant that they were able to aggregate capital from all around the world, make themselves wealthy. The government gets a piece of that. The government gets wealthy. Okay? That's how you build wealth. Now if you disincentivize those people because you're just going to take so much of it that they end up going why am I working this hard? It's so much risk and it's so much hard work and the government's just going to take it. It doesn't make sense. It is disincentivizing. And so now then you ask the country, how are you going to get wealthy? And they're either just going to confiscate, confiscate, confiscate or meaning they're tax paying citizens or they're going to go do it the world over. We live that, we know what that looks like. So how he cannot answer that own question for himself is beyond me.
Audience Member
Let's finish that like analogy, right? Let's say we tax them. They say, I don't want to do this no more. In Atlas Shrugged, they went to a mystical land in the hills of Colorado. What do you think happens to the rich people in America if they get to that point where we get that we disincentivize innovation?
Tom Bilyeu
Well, so the honest answer is any smart country the world over is going to go, oh, you guys are being dumb. I meaning you formerly wealthy nations have alienated the most productive citizens that you have. We're going to seek them out. And so they'll become very capital friendly. So UAE has done spectacular things. Singapore has done spectacular things. People are going to go, zero capital
Audience Member
gains, free to relocate, come over here, business friendly environment. So the person says, I'm not going to do it in America. I'll go to the UAE and start Facebook.
Tom Bilyeu
Correct. And so that is how countries compete with each other. And one of the brilliant things that America did was they said, we're going to bring together all these disparate states who will all compete with each other for their citizens. And this is why we see people leaving California to go to Texas to go to Florida, because they're like, well, I guess you guys are going to be the home of innovation. And watching Florida, like during the crypto craze, watching Florida get all the tax dollars from all those crypto guys by saying, yeah, we're going to be the place that is cheap. And so in terms of taxes, so come here. And they did. And so you will see countries compete just like that for talent. So it's when people act like the most productive citizens in the world are somehow stuck in their country. That might be true if all of your wealth is based on real estate. Sure as hell not going to be true if you're doing something that is mobile, global, whether that's finance, whether that is software, those guys are going to go wherever the hell they want. And as things like AI become the most important industry on the planet, they're just going to go wherever the people are most friendly to that industry and friendly to capital. It's just that simple. Now where these guys are right is that will often take decades. And so you'll be able to confiscate a lot of money as they try to leave. You'll put in an exit tax and all that and you'll be able to get a little bit of money. But the problem is in the long run, you end up losing catastrophically and they need not look any farther than like Argentina. Places that have attempted this before and on a long enough timeframe, they always fail. And so I don't know why these guys don't go to what are the things that work really, really well for like 150 years. And the answer is effectively over the last 500 years, something akin to free market capitalism. Even China had to finally deploy it. You've now got Cuba making noises about the fact that, yeah, trying to control price from the top down just doesn't work. It's like that meme. It's like you're so close, like they will eventually get it or they'll be a backwater for another 100 years. I mean, it's really up to them. But economies have physics and that is the thing that Gary just is not leaning into.
Guest Economist
But taxing the rich at 50% every 30 years is good. Like, it's, it's, it's obviously just quite mind blowingly stupid. And there's absolutely no logical consistency here. And I was fascinated because, and when this came up in the two meetings that I had, I think, I think they were both the back end of last year, I remember thinking, you know, maybe these, this is such a, such a phenomenally stupid argument. I assume that these two people must have like got it from each other. And now to see, like the Economist magazine say it's. Honestly, this is one of the most interesting things I've seen because I think it really reveals what is going on in the heads of, I guess, sort of polite society in, in when they oppose wealth taxes. Because if you.
Tom Bilyeu
Here's the problem. So he's literally not saying anything. He's just saying it's dumb. I don't know why they do it. They must have gotten it from each other. He has literally put forward not a single argument about why you should do it. He's just saying it's stupid. So this is what drives me bonkers about his popularity. So there, there is a guy named Daniel Priestley who is insanely smart. And it is this I feel, I'm so torn. I get why he focuses on business content. He is an entrepreneur and so it's a straight line. It's very Alex Hormozy of him. Stay on message, which is the thing I am pathologically incapable of doing. But I wish Daniel Priestley would just, just talk about economics. He is really, really sharp and I saw him debate Gary's economics and every time he would have Gary dead to rights on the cause and effect in the economy, Gary would Go. Fine, fine, yeah. No, no, no, Daniel, let's just keep doing it your way and then let's have people revolt. That's just emotion. So Gary, that's not an argument. Take on his arguments one by one. Because the French Revolution did not end in peace for all. It was not an uprising of people who actually understood the economy and were tired of being abused. It was the emotional outburst of the overproduced elites who had time to sit around and whinge. And they ended up becoming such a radical, murderous force that Napoleon rises to power, finally strongmans them into being an army, and then goes and kills millions of people all over Europe in a bloodthirsty battle of conquest. And so if that's Gary's punchline, it's like the. Are we talking about. So Gary, let's say that you really just want to make life better for your friends who aren't making a lot of money. That's part of his origin story. Okay, Rad. How do we actually do that, Gary? Because giving them free shit has never once worked in history. So what the actual, by the way, I have been to Kuwait. Guess what conversation they have about their wealth, their sovereign wealth fund. It makes people lazy. Okay? So it is not a free pass like you. You can't just give people shit and expect them to be innovative and to play on a world stage because now they've finally got enough money to do shit. People in England, people in the US are living lives that. I mean, there are people in the US that have iPhones and air conditioning and they're spiraling because life is so hard to make ends meet. It's like, look, there is a real thing. We have broken the economy. The K shaped economy is a terrifying, immoral, sinister, evil thing that politicians and bankers have done to us. But when I see governments that are the equivalent of somebody who's morbidly obese saying the equivalent of I need more calories, it, it is so illogical, so destructive and so easy to walk through the cause and effect of how you end up there and the cause and effect of how you get back out of that problem. And so Gary's arguments are the equivalent of a morbidly obese person saying, I need more calories because ice cream tastes good and if you don't give me ice cream, I'm going to throw a fit and all my friends are going
Audience Member
to throw a fit.
Tom Bilyeu
It's like, what are we talking about? So we have done a bad thing to people. We have voted for politicians who deficit spend and Then we have stolen from everybody through money printing via the central bank. And we have created a K shaped economy where the people who understand how the siphon works get wealthier by the day. Not because they're the ones stealing from you, because they understand how you steal from everyone and they know how to protect themselves. And then we have people who don't understand how to protect themselves being stolen from every day. So Gary, you're right that this system is broken. You're right that this system is rigged. But all of your emotional outbursts, all of your emotional argumentation will save exactly nobody. Let's talk about a pattern that is guaranteed to be killing your progress. You know what you need to do? You need consistent nutrition. We all do. You need vitamins, probiotics, greens. We all know that we should be doing more of it. When your morning gets chaotic, you skip it. When you travel, you skip it. When your routine breaks, everything tends to break. And that inconsistency compounds against you every single day. AG1 is designed to solve the execution problem. One scoop 8 ounces of water and you're done. You're getting 75 plus ingredients, vitamins and minerals, pre and probiotics, nutrient dense superfoods. Everything that used to require six, seven different supplements and perfect planning now happens in one drink that takes about 30 seconds to make. Right now, AG1 is giving you $87 worth of free gifts with your first subscription. You get a welcome kit, travel packs, vitamin D3 plus K2 and flavor samples. Click the link in the show notes or visit drinkag1.comimpact to claim this offer.
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Episode Title: Gary's Economics Can't Answer This One Question About Wealth Taxes | Tom Reacts
Date: June 25, 2026
Host: Tom Bilyeu
Main Theme:
Tom Bilyeu takes a critical look at the case for wealth taxes, focusing on arguments presented by “Gary’s Economics”—a popular advocate for wealth taxes online. The episode dissects emotional versus logical reasoning around taxing wealth, critiques popular economic misconceptions, and explains the mechanisms behind wealth disparity, government spending, and innovation incentives.
[03:21-06:57]
Quote:
"People do not understand the difference between income and wealth. And Gary is so far doing nothing to explain the difference."
— Tom Bilyeu [05:57]
[07:02-09:55]
Quote:
"If what he's saying is the very thing that would make it a, a fair tax system is you're charging workers 50% and then you're charging, which by the way, you're not. The vast majority of people in England pay no taxes. And a very similar thing here in the U.S."
— Tom Bilyeu [08:19]
[11:21-20:13]
Quote:
"The way that the economy has been broken is very simple. It is, you create a central bank. That central bank creates a wealth pump mechanism by which through money printing, driven by deficit spending, you end up robbing people of their purchasing power..."
— Tom Bilyeu [18:10]
[20:13-28:28]
Quote:
"The government with inflation at 2 to 3% as a target is that's actually a lie. They're eating all of those positive deflationary things coming from innovation and technology plus 2 or 3%. And so they're saying, I'm going to add just enough money over the new goods to take from you an additional 2 to 3%."
— Tom Bilyeu [24:53]
[29:25-40:19]
Quote:
"…all of that wealth that people are saying that he has, like, that's all tied up and he makes the stock perform so they're only floating like 5% of the company. So all of the, like, Elon is a trillionaire and all that. It's all make believe."
— Tom Bilyeu [29:25]
[40:19-56:41]
Quotes:
"When you disincentivize that, then all of a sudden people go, well, if I want to get rich, I have to go steal it. And that's why countries would go and just try to conquer their neighboring countries to get things from them."
— Tom Bilyeu [50:21]
"He has literally put forward not a single argument about why you should do it [wealth taxes]. He's just saying it's stupid...That's just emotion."
— Tom Bilyeu [56:41]
[53:00-55:45]
Quote:
"So you will see countries compete just like that for talent. So it's when people act like the most productive citizens in the world are somehow stuck in their country. That might be true if all of your wealth is based on real estate. Sure as hell not going to be true if you're doing something that is mobile, global, whether that's finance, whether that is software, those guys are going to go wherever the hell they want."
— Tom Bilyeu [53:31]
On Government Spending:
"The US government, and I'm sure it's very similar in the UK, but the US government has almost doubled their tax base in the last 10 years...In what way, Gary? Please state the way, because I know, I'm sure it feels like governments are getting poorer, but the reality is on the ground, the governments are getting richer and richer by the second because they are collecting more and more and more taxes. Like a morbidly obese person who is screaming for more calories. I need more calories. I need more calories."
— Tom Bilyeu [09:55]
On Inflation Mechanisms:
"The greatest psyop ever pulled on the world is to convince them that deflation is bad. Deflation is amazing. You should want deflation, just not crisis led deflation."
— Tom Bilyeu [25:44]
On Emotional Arguments in Economics:
"Gary's arguments are the equivalent of a morbidly obese person saying, I need more calories because ice cream tastes good and if you don't give me ice cream, I'm going to throw a fit and all my friends are going to throw a fit."
— Tom Bilyeu [60:12]
In this episode, Tom Bilyeu systematically unpacks the logic (or lack thereof) behind calls for a wealth tax. He stresses the need to understand the difference between income and wealth, underscores how inflation and central banking drive wealth gaps, and warns that simplistic, emotional policy prescriptions risk destroying incentives for innovation and driving talent out of tax-hostile jurisdictions. Throughout, Tom’s tone is passionate yet insistent on cause-and-effect reasoning, urging listeners to look beyond populist outrage towards real structural reforms—namely, monetary policy and sound incentives—if the goal is to build a more just and dynamic economy.