BTW, do understand that this is just a means of indirect taxation.
We inflate the currency by 10% and everybody's money and cash equivalents are devalued by that amount. Real assets won't be touched as much, and like any flat tax this is a regressive tax.
I'd much rather we simply raised the highest tax rate to 70% above $1M and hired a few thousand new auditors so that every single return above $500K gets audited every year.
But if the GOP are too spineless to do this, then coin it.
The idea though, that money creation is always inherently inflationary, is perhaps the biggest and most successful conservative scaremongering myth in existence; it's not actually true that it is
always inflationary, because there are ample ways of spending the money that carry a low enough inflation penalty.
I'd really encourage people to not accept on its face, the idea that money creation
always leads to inflation, because properly understanding the
real causes of inflation, provides a very significant and important change in perspective on how economics works.
Always look at individual examples of
how/where money is spent, because
that is what determines how inflationary it is; take all claims that money creation will be inflationary with skepticism, because most of that is pure scaremongering and indoctrination, and if you don't challenge it you come to believe it yourself too; think critically.
For starters, one of the primary causes of inflation is demand-pull inflation, i.e. too much demand chasing inadequate supply; this means that where there is excess supply, i.e. where supply can be increased to meet increased demand, there will not be inflation.
So straight away, look at the huge amounts of surplus supply in the economy: Surplus labour (unemployed) and surplus industry (including construction); combining these with money creation, is mostly non-inflationary, with worker wages being the primary inflationary potential.
You can even use this to fight inflation, because the upcoming energy crisis, will cause severe inflation due to the price of fossil fuels increasing;
if you put people to work on power infrastructure, such as nuclear/renewables and other power sources, to remove dependance on oil, you can fight future inflation, and all countries are going to need to put in a
huge effort to do this, in the coming decades, and it may already be too late to avoid economic trouble from this coming energy crisis.
So, never take the idea that money creation is always inflationary, as an accepted truth; it is one of the biggest falsehoods, one of the biggest pieces of bad economics and propaganda around.
The main time money creation becomes inflationary, is when production in economies is overheating, i.e. when there is full employment and no capacity for increased production.