>transferring money from investment class to consumption class.
That's not nearly enough to cover it. The top 1% has 38% of the wealth. In 2009 total wealth of US was 55 trillion[1]. That leaves us 20.9T to spread around 315 remaining millions. That's about $66,300 per person from our anti-rich crusade. Not a bad bounty, but that's a one-time prize. How do you intend to fund UBI for anything longer than a trivial amount of time (<5 years) with such a small sum?
"Redistribution" doesn't mean you take rich people's money in a one-off scheme. It means that you tax them higher. One particular opportunity there is capital gains tax, which has been much lower than sweat-of-the-brow income for a long time now. Equalize the rates (or better yet, jack capital gains up even higher - there's no reason to encourage economic rent over labor), and you've got a very nice monetary stream to direct elsewhere.
I'm not convinced your math is accurate. I'm definitely not an expert, but I also don't think the money would just disappear into the void - presumably it would continue to cycle through the economy.
That's not nearly enough to cover it. The top 1% has 38% of the wealth. In 2009 total wealth of US was 55 trillion[1]. That leaves us 20.9T to spread around 315 remaining millions. That's about $66,300 per person from our anti-rich crusade. Not a bad bounty, but that's a one-time prize. How do you intend to fund UBI for anything longer than a trivial amount of time (<5 years) with such a small sum?
1. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wealth_in_the_United_States#/m...