Slotline, it is not just the annual citizens' dividend, it is also the lack of sales, income and payroll taxes. Also the current inflated housing costs. I'm sure many researchers and engineers and suchlike would be nervous today taking the plunge and leaving salaried jobs with perhaps tuition fee and mortgage debts to pay.
I agree the USSR was more oppressive than what we have in Europe or North America- by a long stretch. The USSR was not "capital redistribution". It was the utter opposite. It was concentrating control of capital in the hands of a select few central planners. What I'm suggesting is at the opposite end of the spectrum from a soviet command economy. I would put the spectrum as: USSR/North Korea> putocratic oligarchies> what we have now> what I'm suggesting. The USSR transfered power from a few oligarchs over to even fewer soviet central planners.
The ideal CD (rent on all productive potential) kills the opportunity
If you build a new asset you get to keep plenty. Imagine a start up company that is worth several million dollars after a few years. The asset tax wouldn't even dent that. All the asset tax takes is the ongoing rent gathered by pre-existing assets. It removes the opportunity to "get rich in your sleep" from owning pre-existing assets but does not impair "wealth creation".
To clarify I'm saying all assets should be taxed equally based on their current market value.
To quote Michal Kalecki :"the inducement to invest in fixed capital is not affected by a capital tax because it is paid on any type of wealth. Whether an amount is held in cash or government securities or invested in building a factory, the same capital tax is paid on it and thus the comparative advantage is unchanged. "
"Good judgment comes from experience. Experience comes from bad judgment." - Mulla Nasrudin