Book
Slaying Leviathan: The Moral Case for Tax Reform
In the natural order, virtue and vice each carries its own consequences. On the one hand, virtue yields largely positive results. Hard work, patience, and carefulness, for example, tend to generate prosperity. Vice, on the other hand, brings negative consequences. Sloth, impatience, and recklessness, for example, tend toward suffering.In Slaying Leviathan, Leslie Carbone argues that since the early twentieth century, U.S. tax policy has been designed to mitigate the natural economic results of both virtue and vice. When the government disrupts the natural order through taxation by creating incentives and disincentives that overturn these natural consequences, the government perverts its own function and becomes part of the problem
Detail Information
Call Number |
35 SLA les
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Publisher | Potomac Books : Virginia., 2009 |
Collation |
xiii, 191 p.; 24 cm.
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Language |
English
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Classification |
35 SLA les
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ISBN/ISSN |
978-1-59797-417-2
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Edition |
-
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Subject(s) |