Indeed. And saving/investing is important! It's not a coincidence that the industrial revolution happened in a country with a secure established rule of law such that people could make investments without worrying about losing them at the whim of a dictator.
More importantly, it happened in a country which forced people off their land at gunpoint, into urban poverty, where they provided a huge supply of cheap, fungible, and utterly disposable factory labor.
But that would run counter to the neo-liberal narrative... After all, the rule of law serves to protect investments, not the peasant forced off his land.
Where was the rule of law to protect said peasants? Perhaps the rule of law isn't actually necessary for industrialization - as long as capital is protected, everything is all well and good. Unless you're a peasant.
Urbanization was certainly important in the development of industrialization, in that urbanization is essential for all forms of specialization; but I would dispute the notion that having a large supply of cheap labour was important. To the contrary, since industrialization is the process whereby capital is invested in order to increase worker productivity, it is less useful where there is a cheap workforce, not more useful.
I agree that the rule of law didn't protect peasants who were forced off their hereditary lands. You'll note that it wasn't the peasants who led the industrial revolution.
Remember also that at the time, breach of employment contract by the employer was a civil matter the employee would have to pursue out of his or her own pocket. Breach by the employee was a criminal matter (see the Master and Servant acts, which essentially perpetuated feudal norms into the industrial age). It was also illegal for workers to "combine" -- band together to say that either all of them would get a higher wage, or none of them would work -- and organizing such a "combination" was also a criminal offense.
Like several major sectors of the US economy at the time (and later), Britain's "revolution" was utterly dependent on coerced labor, viciously enforced by the power of the government. But some people still like to think of those times as the good old days of "laissez-faire" and government "staying out of the market".
Now, you can argue that this was a "rule of law", just a brutally repressive one which systematically granted special rights to certain classes of people, but then you're on much shakier ground.
South America, unlike England, did not have captive colonial markets, that it could sell its mass-manufactured goods to. South America was the captive colonial market.
> In the long run, every dollar of wealth gets spent.
Not necessarily.
"Apple (AAPL), Microsoft (MSFT), Alphabet (GOOGL), Cisco Systems (CSCO) and Oracle (ORCL) are sitting on $504 billion, or 30%, of the $1.7 trillion in cash and cash equivalents held by U.S. non-financial companies in 2015, according to an analysis released Friday by ratings agency Moody's Investors Service. That's even more cash concentration than in previous years, as these five companies held 27% of cash in 2014 and 25% in 2013. Apple alone is holding more cash and investments than eight of the 10 entire industry sectors." [1]
Also, the top 1 percent owns 90 percent of wealth in the US [2].
"First, economic inequality has worsened significantly in the United States and some other countries. The richest 1 percent in the United States now own more wealth than the bottom 90 percent. Oxfam estimates that the richest 85 people in the world own as much wealth as the bottom half of humanity.
The situation might be tolerable if a rising tide were lifting all boats. But it’s lifting mostly the yachts. In 2010, 93 percent of the additional income created in America went to the top 1 percent."
> As a practical matter, consumption taxes can be made progressive by combining them with a low-income tax credit or a universal basic income.
I agree that a consumption tax can be combined with other policy to prevent the regressive nature of a consumption tax alone. This requires wealth be taxed in various forms (ownership of investments, land, etc).
Nobody has a Scrooge McDuck cash vault, not Apple, Microsoft, nor anyone else. It's all invested - even money in a checking account isn't actually there, it's loaned out to someone who spends it.
> the top 1 percent owns 90 percent of wealth in the US
Not to be a dick, but the above cited sources and you made assertions without anything pointing to anything to back them up. What reason do any of us have to put any stock in what you've written?
I don't think a citation is necessary. Just the roads in this country represent enormous wealth, and they're all owned by the government. Throw in the national parks, the national forests, all the government owned land (the government owns most of Alaska). Next, all the military bases and hardware, airplanes, ships, support structure. The infrastructure, NASA, buildings, waterways, riparian rights, and, let's not forget, all the money the government collects and spends every year.
As for how banks work, pretty much any book on how the banking business works will tell you that. Or you could watch that old movie "It's a Wonderful Life" where they give an accurate description at the end how banks work. And frankly, it's just common sense. Why would banks offer free checking? They're not charities. They need the money so they can turn around and loan it out. It's fundamentally how banking works.
I've never heard of a Scrooge McDuck cash vault outside of a comic book. Have you? (There is Fort Knox, but that's the feds, and it's not cash.)
Those dollars are going to get spent eventually; you just haven't waited long enough.
But the foreign assets issue is a peculiarly US problem, resulting from the US being almost unique in the world in the extent to which it imposes taxes on income earned in other countries. (The other such country is Eritrea, and the US voted in favour of a UN security council resolution condemning the Eritrean tax regime.)
> Those dollars are going to get spent eventually; you just haven't waited long enough.
I'm unwilling to wait until the end of civilization while citizens of the richest country in the world go hungry [1], go without shelter [2], and die due to not being able to put $50 together for their insulin [3].
Much better to tax consumption.