As Democrats
and Republicans jostle over the particulars of a new economic
stimulus package to address the devastation of the coronavirus
pandemic, it is not too early in President Joe Biden’s tenure
to ask, “When will we start taxing the rich?” Upon
joining the Senate Finance Committee, Senator
Elizabeth Warren
(D-MA) promptly announced she would introduce a 2 percent wealth tax
on estates of more than $50 million so that the fabulously wealthy
would “finally pay their fair share in taxes.” Warren’s
idea is one step in the right direction.
The “Tax
Cuts and Jobs Act”
of 2017 - the signature legislation of the Trump administration and
Republican-dominated Senate - disproportionately hurt poor and
working-class Americans and lined the pockets of the ultra-wealthy.
It depleted the Treasury, laying
the groundwork
to justify cutting Social Security and Medicare benefits. According
to the Congressional Budget Office, the law is projected to fuel a
$1.9 trillion hole in the Treasury over 10 years. The law was also
written to include numerous “Easter
eggs”
containing newer tax breaks for the wealthy, scheduled to hatch years
after it was enacted. Now, as one of those buried tax breaks that
will benefit millionaires is set to take effect, more than 100
Democrats signed
on to a letter
demanding it be repealed. That, too, is a step in the right
direction.
But much, much
more is needed.
As the United
States remains paralyzed by a pandemic, Congress faces persistently
high
unemployment rates,
widespread
hunger,
and falling
state and local revenues.
Money is being sucked out of the bottom rungs of American society,
flowing ever upward into the hands of a few wealthy elites. According
to a January analysis by Inequality.org,
660 U.S. billionaires have seen their collective wealth increase by
more than $1.1 trillion over the first 10 months of the pandemic.
That’s a nearly 40 percent increase in the wealth of the
wealthiest among us.
To summarize,
conservative lawmakers gave wealthy Americans a massive gift in 2017
at the expense of the U.S. Treasury. And on top of that, the
ultrarich became shockingly richer within one year of a devastating
global pandemic. There is a direct line between the mind-blowing
largesse that elites enjoy and the dystopian economic wreckage that
the rest of us find ourselves in. Put bluntly, there is money in this
country - lots and lots of it - and it is in the hands of a few. We
have to simply wrench it away from them by force. One easy and
nonviolent way to do this is to impose hefty taxes on them.
For years,
politicians have managed to claim, contrary to evidence, that
throwing money at the rich was the path to prosperity for all. To
prop up this unrealistic fantasy, wealthy elites have been labeled
“job creators,” and working-class Americans have
routinely been misled into believing that tax cuts for the rich are
important because in some faraway future they could one day be just
as rich and therefore benefit from said tax cuts. Fifty years of
pursuing so-called “trickle-down” economic policies have
not worked, either in the United States, or in other countries, as
per a global
analysis
by the London School of Economics. Or, one could say they have worked
as intended - by directly benefitting those who are already rich.
Even before
the pandemic, a whopping majority
of Americans
supported increasing taxes on the wealthiest Americans to 70 percent,
which is still less than the 90 percent tax rate that the nation once
imposed on its richest citizens. Some wealthy Americans, embarrassed
by how much their wealth has fueled inequality, are asking
to be taxed
at a higher rate. The recent
controversy
over Reddit users gleefully squeezing some hedge fund managers on
Wall Street through their collective small-scale investments in
GameStop has revealed a well of public anger at a moneyed class that
routinely mints money with ease. Taxing the rich is uncontroversial -
except in the halls of Congress, where the rules of the economy are
carefully rigged to ensure financial stratification.
Like many of
his Democratic colleagues, President Joe Biden has expressed
a desire
to level the playing field and has proposed
a tax plan
that moves in the right direction, raising taxes on those making more
than $400,000 a year and repealing the tax cuts that the wealthiest
now enjoy. Because tax-related legislation need only pass
with a simple majority
through the U.S. Senate, Biden does not need Republican support to
change tax laws - just as Republicans did not need Democrats in 2017
to sign on to their tax giveaway to the rich.
Biden ought to
consider adding a
financial transaction tax
on short-selling to his proposal - an idea that has been revived by
the recent GameStop controversy. A small tax on every financial
transaction would not only reduce the volatility of the stock market,
but also help redistribute wealth and generate hundreds of billions
of tax revenue dollars, as per the Economic
Policy Institute.
Some have
suggested that the mere action of increased
funding for the Internal Revenue Service
would enable the federal government to enforce tax laws already on
the books and generate serious revenues. Lawrence Summers, President
Barack Obama’s former Treasury secretary reviled by
progressives as a “plutocrat-loving
economist,”
wrote a paper
concluding that “investing less than $100 billion in the IRS
over a decade will generate $1.2 trillion to $1.4 trillion in
additional tax revenue, primarily from high-income individuals, who
are disproportionately responsible for underpayment of owed tax
liabilities.”
Now some
states are eyeing the piles of money that their richest residents sit
on. The state of Washington
is considering an extremely modest wealth tax that would levy a mere
1 percent tax on the financial assets, and not the income, of its
richest residents. It would even exempt the first $1 billion in
taxable value. Only about 100 people in the entire state would be
impacted and by so little that they would hardly notice it. Although
the bill is so modest, there is so much wealth being hoarded by a few
that it would generate $2.5 billion per year in state taxes. Yet,
Republicans shamelessly attacked the idea, with state Representative
Drew Stokesbary characterizing the bill as “7 million
Washingtonians gang[ing] up on the nine richest.” He worried
that the rich would simply leave the state.
Momentum is
also building in the state
of New York
to tax the incomes of its richest residents. A group called Alliance
for Quality Education is pushing Governor Andrew Cuomo to back a tax
measure that would raise $50 billion in revenue. As in the case of
Washington, Cuomo worries that raising taxes on the rich would force
them to move out of the state. The state of Massachusetts
has apparently been losing some of its billionaires to low-tax states
like Florida. But there is an easy solution to the flight of elites:
if the Biden
administration were to raise federal taxes
on the wealth and income of the richest in order to distribute it to
states, they would have no place to hide.
Sure,
the rich could move their money offshore, as many routinely do. But
closing tax loopholes preventing such practices is also
straightforward. Nearly a decade ago, Senator Bernie Sanders (I-VT)
and Representative Jan Schakowsky (D-IL) introduced
bills in the Senate and House
to close such loopholes. For every move that wealthy elites have to
hoard money, there is a simple countermove that lawmakers could take
to wrest it away from them.