A framework for quantifying how monetary policy silently extracts resources from vulnerable populations, similar to taxation but through inflation and currency debasement.
Yacob believed reason could expose hidden injustices masked by social convention. The 'dignity tax' applies this insight to central banking: measuring what ordinary people lose through monetary policies they don't control. When central banks expand money supply to finance government spending or bail out banks, the resulting inflation is a hidden tax on cash-holders and wage-earners—those least able to protect themselves through asset speculation or debt. Unlike visible taxation, this tax is invisible, imposed without consent, and justified through technical language obscuring its redistributive effect. Measuring the dignity tax requires honesty: calculating real wages, purchasing power erosion, and differential inflation impacts across income levels. Central banks practicing Yacob's reason would make this tax visible and justify it philosophically rather than hide it behind monetary aggregates.
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