Chattanooga Times Free Press

What’s a ‘wealth tax’ and how would it work?

- BY JOSH BOAK

To help pay for his economic and social agenda, President Joe Biden is looking to go where the big money is: billionair­es.

Biden never endorsed an outright “wealth tax” when campaignin­g last year. But his more convention­al proposed rate hikes on the income of large corporatio­ns and the wealthiest Americans have hit a roadblock.

That leaves a special tax on the assets, not the income, of billionair­es being proposed by a Senate Democrat as a possible vehicle to help pay for child care, universal pre-kindergart­en, child tax credits, family leave and environmen­tal initiative­s.

Biden has vowed his programs will not add a penny to the deficit, which means selling to Congress and voters a tax on the wealthiest .0005% of Americans.

HOW WOULD IT WORK?

Essentiall­y, billionair­es earn the bulk of their money off their wealth. This might be from the stock market. It could include, once sold, beachfront mansions or the ownership of rare art and antiquitie­s. A triceratop­s skeleton.

This new tax would apply solely to people with at least $1 billion in assets or $100 million in income for three straight years. These standards mean just 700 taxpayers would face the additional tax on increases to their wealth, according to a descriptio­n obtained by The Associated Press of the proposal of Senate Finance Committee Chairman Ron Wyden of Oregon.

On tradeable items such as stocks, billionair­es would still pay a tax even if they held on to the asset. They would be taxed on any increases in value and take deductions on losses. Under current law, those assets get taxed only when they’re sold.

Billionair­es would also face an additional tax on non-tradeable assets such as real estate and business interests once those assets are sold. During the first year of the proposed tax, the billionair­es would also owe taxes on any builtin gains that predate the tax.

HOW MUCH MONEY WOULD IT RAISE?

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi estimated Sunday on CNN that the tax would raise $200 billion to $250 billion. It’s a meaningful sum, but it’s well shy of the nearly $2 trillion in proposed additional spending over 10 years being negotiated right now. That means additional levies such as the global minimum tax and increased enforcemen­t dollars for the IRS would still be needed to help close the gap.

And the forecasts for revenue from the wealth tax are highly debatable.

“It’s just impossible to implement,” said Allison Schrager, a senior fellow at the conservati­ve Manhattan Institute. “There’s a lot of evidence that these things don’t work, and I’ve never heard an explanatio­n of how this could be workable.”

WHY WOULD BIDEN GO THIS ROUTE?

The president would rather raise corporate tax rates and rates on wealthy individual­s. That was his initial proposal, but he’s got to appease West Virginia Sen. Joe Manchin and Arizona Sen. Kyrsten Sinema. Those are the two make-or-break Democratic votes in the evenly split Senate.

Sinema objected to higher rates, which brought the wealth tax into play as an alternativ­e.

The idea gained steam after the publicatio­n of French economist Thomas Piketty’s book “Capital in the Twenty-First Century.” Massachuse­tts Sen. Elizabeth Warren made a 2% wealth tax a trademark policy in the 2020 Democratic presidenti­al primaries, and fellow candidate Bernie Sanders, the senator from Vermont, proposed his own wealth tax.

ARE BILLIONAIR­ES REALLY THAT RICH?

Seems that way.

There is a legitimate debate about the optimal forms of taxation. Is it better for the economy for the wealthy to keep their assets invested in new businesses? Or, is it better for some of their money to go to the government to help fund programs like child care, universal pre-K and shifts to renewable energy?

What is clear is the wealthy do have money to tax, should the government wish to do it.

America’s billionair­es have seen their collected wealth surge 70% since the start of the pandemic to over $5 trillion, according to an analysis by the pro-wealth-tax Americans for Tax Fairness and the Institute for Policy Studies Program on Inequality. That gain from March 18, 2020, to this past month is equal in size to Biden’s spending plans over 10 years.

“Right now, billionair­es are not paying a dime in taxes on their fabulous income gains from their stock holdings during the pandemic,” said Frank Clemente, executive director of Americans for Tax Fairness. “The billionair­es income tax would tax the increase in the value of those assets each year just like workers’ wages are taxed.”

There were 614 U.S. billionair­es at the start of the pandemic, a total that has now grown to 745.

Part of what makes the coronaviru­s unique is many poorer Americans also became wealthier, but they did so at a much slower pace than billionair­es.

Federal Reserve data indicate the net worth of the bottom 90% of Americans — a group that includes the middle class — rose by roughly 22%. For many Americans, the wealth increase reflected a rising stock market, higher home values and unpreceden­ted government aid in the form of direct checks and forgivable payroll loans to small businesses.

CAN BILLIONAIR­ES ESCAPE TAXATION?

They’ve found ways before. They can hire armadas of lawyers, accountant­s and others to minimize their tax burdens. The news outlet ProPublica revealed various tax shelters with IRS data earlier this year, and the recent Pandora Papers showed there is a global industry to shelter the assets of the politicall­y powerful and extremely wealthy.

The ProPublica investigat­ion showed that Warren Buffett paid an average rate of 19%. Amazon founder Jeff Bezos paid 23%, while Tesla’s Elon Musk was at roughly 30%. The top tax rate on income earned from labor is 37%, but the tax on capital gains is a lower 20% and that favors those with extreme wealth. The lower capital gains rate can also encourage more investment in new companies that help the economy grow.

A White House analysis in September indicated the country’s 400 wealthiest families paid an average federal income tax rate of 8.2% between 2010 and 2018. The administra­tion’s fundamenta­l message is that a rate this low is unfair because middle class families often pay a greater share of their income in taxes.

 ?? AP PHOTO/J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE ?? Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W.Va., talks to reporters at the Capitol in Washington earlier this month.
AP PHOTO/J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W.Va., talks to reporters at the Capitol in Washington earlier this month.

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