this post was submitted on 14 Mar 2026
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Unemployment? lmao what? No, taxing the rich is the cure to inflation.
What counts as 'rich' ? Is it people with an income over the average, say $100,000 or more ? or are you talking about those earning over a million per year ?
3x the median, and make > 5x the median illegal, just as we have for below minimum wage.
that aside l, instead of raising rates do a temp raise in Super for everyone above median wage, take the money from their wages but it doesn't go to banks. That takes money out of the Economy now to cool it.
PS. I have zero debt by choice and we (m & f couple) travel SE Asia in the cheap for 6 months a year.
Someone here is really afraid of being properly taxed. It's those muslims stealing your riches right?
? are you just being a dumb cunt or is there something else i should take from this?
Let's start flensing the top 1% and go from there shall we?
ok but how would that bring down country wide inflation?
Sorry I had to use mistral AI on my PC to generate this because I cbf explaining
If you're actually interested there's a whole article on it here
https://www.investopedia.com/articles/markets/081515/how-inflation-and-unemployment-are-related.asp
tldr taxing the richest 1% wouldn't take a bundle of money out of the economy, and it especially wouldn't take inflation out of things regular people buy, like groceries and take away because it's not something the ultra rich have an impact on anyway
Here's Australias latest CPI: https://www.abs.gov.au/statistics/economy/price-indexes-and-inflation/consumer-price-index-australia/latest-release
It would be stupidly unpopular, but I actually think there should be some legislated amount the RBA then could regulate how much taxes go up and down. (Including income and/or corporate taxes)
Starting with the top tax brackets, and in extreme cases going further down tax brackets.
How this would work in practice, since tax is calculated annually, I dunno.
Bur it's patently insane we expect the RBA to control inflation and unemployment with so few tools.
Interest rate and quantitative easing/tightening, that's pretty much it, right?