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Scale Ruins Everything

(coldwaters.substack.com)
175 points drc500free | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0.216s | source
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efitz ◴[] No.41848475[source]
It’s not that scale ruins everything, it’s the pursuit of scale that ruins everything.

I have thought a lot about antitrust recently and realized that it’s an overlapping problem with the VC unicorn problem. People get so hung up with being bigger/biggest, faster/fastest, that they minimize or ignore pathological side effects.

What if we have a progressive tax structure on business based on scale? Partly on size, partly on market power?

For example, what if corporate income tax were tied to the logarithm of the number of employees+contractors? What if the corporate income tax increased with the market share in markets served?

These kind of ideas have very low impact at small scales, but after a certain scale they start to have such a huge effect on bottom line that they disincentive growth for its own sake.

And they’re self-regulating and largely objective, unlike our current antitrust laws in the US.

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Dalewyn ◴[] No.41848614[source]
>For example, what if corporate income tax were tied to the logarithm of the number of employees+contractors?

Unemployment would increase.

>What if the corporate income tax increased with the market share in markets served?

More companies would register in Panama or some other tax haven.

I would be wary of the Law of Unintended Consequences.

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1. efitz ◴[] No.41850163[source]
Uh, I doubt it.

At the companies that would be affected, they would simply divest. Shareholders would not tolerate the destruction of value so new companies would be created, spinning off parts of the original company (products and employees) into new companies.

In fact employment might increase as these new companies would need administrative functions that were previously shared in the larger original company (HR, accounting, etc)