Monday, January 05, 2026

Crypto users forced to share account details with tax officials

 

Taxation in a strong AI world

Here is Dwarkesh’s tweet, based on his recent paper with Trammell, raising the issue of whether wealth taxes will become desirable in the future.  A few points:

1. I think quality homes in good locations will be extremely valuable.  Those could be taxed more.  You could call that a wealth tax, but arguably it is closer to a “housing services tax.”

2. You could put higher consumption taxes on items the wealthy purchase to a disproportionate degree.  Paintings and yachts, and so on.  Tom Holden argues: “In a world in which capital is essentially the only input to production, taxing capital reduces the growth rate of the economy. Whereas at present capital taxes have only level effects. So if anything, capital taxes will become less desirable as the labour share falls.”

3. I think the amount of money spent on health care will go up a lot.  And people will live much longer, which will further boost the amount spent on health care.  Taxing health care more is the natural way to address fiscal problems.  Some people will fly abroad for their knee surgeries, but for a long time most health care will be consumed nearby, even in a strong AI world.  If the way we keep the budget sane is to have people die at 95 instead of 97, there may be some positive social externalities from the shorter life spans.  We also could use some of that money for birth subsidies.

4. As a more general point, capital will not be a perfect substitute for labor, or anything close to that, anytime soon.

5. Final incidence of the AI revolution is not just about the degree of substability of capital for labor.  It is also about supply and demand elasticities in goods and services markets.  For instance, to the extent AI makes various services much cheaper, real wages are rising not falling.  That may or may not be the dominant effect, but do not assume too quickly that wages simply fall.

5b. It is not an equilibrium for capital to simply “have all the goodies.”  Let’s say that Simon Legree, using advanced AI, can produce all the world’s output using a single watt of energy.  And no one else with an AI company can produce anything to compete with that (this already sounds implausible, right?).  If Simon simply hoards all that output, he has no profit, though I guess he can cure his own case of the common cold.  The prices for that output have to fall so it can be purchased by someone else.  The nature of the final equilibrium here is unclear, but again do not assume all or even most of the returns will stay with capital.  That is almost certainly not the case.

Addendum: Here is some follow-up from Dwarkesh.  I think he is talking about a world very different from our own, as there is talk of ownership of galaxies.  That said, many other people wish to implement his ideas sooner than that.


Crypto users forced to share account details with tax officials

 

25 Worst Villains of the Trump Admin MEIDAS+


7 takeaways from Jack Smith’s congressional testimony Politico


Private equity firms sell assets to themselves at a record rate Financial Times


What is private equity up to?

The FT published an articleyesterday in which they reported:

Private equity firms sold companies to themselves at a record rate this year, making use of a controversial tactic to hold on to assets as managers struggled to find buyers or list their investments.


The Harvard professor provides a ceaseless flow of startling details in this exhaustively researched, 1000-year account


The word “capitalism” originated in France in the 1840s, but the system is much older. Sven Beckert starts the story in the port of Aden in 1150...




A Brief History Of The Spreadsheet

HackADay: “We noted that Excel turned 40 this year. That makes it seem old, and today, if you say “spreadsheet,” there’s a good chance you are talking about an Excel spreadsheet, and if not, at least a program that can read and produce Excel-compatible sheets.



 Best non-fiction books of 2025 with one late addition.

Next I was pleased to see my post in which I explain some standard economics but in a deeper, more fundamental way than is usually done: One of my favorite posts of the year


World reacts to US bombing of Venezuela, ‘capture’ of Maduro Al Jazeera


Report: US Attack on Venezuela Killed at Least 40 including military personnel and civilians Antiwar


The United States Captures Nicolás Maduro and his Wife Jonathan Turley


Trump admin sends tough private message to oil companies on Venezuela Politico


Trump’s Golden Hour: Historically Flawless Military Masterclass or Just Another Theatrical Production? Simplicius


Why Capturing Maduro Solves Nothing Modern War Monitor


Decapitation Without Destruction: Why the Abduction of President Maduro Creates a Strategic Crisis for the United States Kautilya the Contemplator


Colombia sends armed forces to Venezuela border amid concern over refugee ‘influx The Guardian


Mexico condemns U.S. military action in Venezuela, capture of Maduro The Washington

Sunday, January 04, 2026

Story of Cold River - Reading Is a Vice

 Cold River is frozen



Being a reader means cultivating a relationship with the world that, by most standards, can seem pointless and counterproductive.

The last great Broadway season was 1957-58

“In the woods where snow is thick, bars of sunlight lay like pale fire.” 🔥 Catherine Mansfield


“But its the same with any life. Imagine one selected day struck out of it and think how different its course would have been. Pause you who read this and think for a moment of the long chain of iron or gold, of thorns or flowers, that would never have bound you but for the formation of the first link on one memorable day.”

This quote, "thorns or flowers, that would never have bound you, but for the formation of the first link on one memorable day," is from 
Charles Dickens, Great Expectations
Charles Dickens' novel Great Expectations, reflecting on how a single, significant event (like meeting Miss Havisham) sets off a chain reaction of life-altering experiences, good or bad, that shape one's destiny. It emphasizes the profound impact of seemingly small moments and chance encounters in creating our life's complex story. 
Key Idea:
  • The Power of the First Link: The quote uses the metaphor of a chain (made of iron or gold, thorns or flowers) to show that everything that follows—the good (gold/flowers) and the bad (iron/thorns)—stems from that initial, pivotal moment, linking everything together. 
Context in Great Expectations:
  • This sentiment reflects the protagonist Pip's realization about how his entire life's trajectory changed after his first encounter with the eccentric Miss Havisham on a particular "memorable day," leading to his "great expectations". 



We May Finish A Book, But That Book Is Never Quite Finished With Us

“My books are teachers but also companions who know more than I do, and who in the long run wish me well. I would no sooner get rid of them than I would an old friend.” - NPR


The World Is In A Reading Slump. These Podcasts Might Help

Reading is down “thanks in large part to the number of digital distractions competing for our limited attention.” Ironically, these podcasts might help fix that. - The New York Times


Mass Market Paperback Books Are Disappearing

“You could be anybody of any kind of background. And for basically the equivalent of a dollar or two, you could be educated. You didn't have to be in a structure. You didn't have to be an elitist.” And now? That era is over. - 


The World’s Supply Of Frankincense Is Running Low

Like maple syrup, frankincense is harvested by tapping the sap of a tree, in this case several varieties of the Boswellia tree, which grows in the Horn of Africa. Those trees — all wild; for whatever reasons, nobody farms Boswellia — are threatened by climate change, pest infestation, local conflict, and, above all, overharvesting....



 Eurotrash -- Christian Kracht's novel of wealth, history, and guilt


Siri Hustvedt


Weather Markings

The list of small deformities passed unrecorded
In the stupor of heredity,
Like our weather,
Clouding over the tiny barn
Where he said he saw Judas hanging
Behind the old tractor
But it was the Swensby boy in a blue and yellow plaid shirt
And no note.
He went screaming Judas into the cornfield
And couldn’t be hushed until evening.
Oh God the failure of prayers in the idiot days
Of summer behind the goldenrod,
Dusty on my hands; scattering doubts like the dandelions
Turned white and blown to seed—
More doubts and more prayers
Asking God not to hide his face:
The face of our weather, immense and old,
Covering the sky with clouds to smother the moon:
A small oval, like the small pale face of Jesus
In the blue book on the table with one unsteady leg.
Look at the sky, Marit,
Look at the bland green behind the leaves’ paralysis
In the minutes when panic is suspended
In an estranged color,
Before the cellar door is raised
And we descend into the air
Preserving canned goods,
Before the prayers in the damp on the cold concrete
And long before the rain.
Inga with a withered hand waves it over the uprooted maple
Where the swing hung for twelve years
And where we played the fields were an ocean
And the tree a ship,
Before the mosquitoes came at about nine
And we fled in to cards or stories upstairs:
Matching suits as one moth tries the screen
And flies for the bulb
A puny tremor of white over the grey mattress
Where you sat naked on a Friday that summer.
I fingered the scar on your hip in the empty house
And whispered anyway:
Our clandestine music in muggy weather
During a walk
Past the still green grapes and the clothesline
With one pair of socks and an apron;
Belated spectres of surprise in the night,
Belonging to no one, except the heat
And our tipsy inclination.
Those hours were unmartyred,
Almost unspent,
Requiring the same effort as a dream
When the scenery becomes illegible,
And I forgot the ache of familiarity in the outlines
Of the rainwater barrels and the pump
And I concentrated on the stars,
The dot to dot of the big and little dipper.
But they began to die as the storm
Gathered for the drowning.
Turn off the lights so I can’t see your face,
Hide your prints made in the mud
With your bare feet between the zinnias and the columbine
So they never reach morning,
And let me have your scent only.
When the hidden sun was just giving pink to the sky
You pressed me into a corner behind the door
And traced with your finger
The large violet birthmark on the left side of my face.

 




 

  

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