Los Angeles Times

Don’t tax us more, ‘quite rich’ guys say

Two billionair­es say in op-ed piece that they can spend their vast fortunes more wisely than politician­s can.

- MICHAEL HILTZIK

Statements by billionair­es explaining why they already pay plenty in taxes and shouldn’t have to pay any more have become so much a part of the political landscape that they deserve a “Jeopardy!” category all to themselves.

A new op-ed on this theme, penned for the Tuesday Wall Street Journal by Home Depot co-founder Bernard Marcus and New York supermarke­t magnate John Catsimatid­is, sets a standard for the genre that other tycoons will shoot for in vain. Let’s take a look.

In their very first sentence, the authors declare, “The two of us are quite rich”— thereby instantly establishi­ng their piece as the Platonic ideal of Wall Street Journal op-eds.

The rest of the piece, which is headlined “Making Money is a Patriotic Act,” is notable for the self-refutation embodied in the rest of that opening paragraph. Its second sentence reads, “We have earned more money than we could have imagined and more than we can spend on ourselves, our children and grandchild­ren.” Then comes sentence 4: “But we have nothing to apologize for, and we don’t think the government should have more of our profits.”

In other words, they have more money than they can spend, but they don’t want to give it up on any but their own terms.

Who should have more of their profits, then? The answer is a common one in essays like this: They’ll decide for themselves.

“We know we can spend our dollars more wisely, and in ways that benefit our communitie­s and our country, than politician­s can,” they write. (My mother would paraphrase their theme as “I like me, who do you like?”)

This is the crux of the billionair­e’s anti-tax screed the world over, so it’s worth examining in detail.

The Marcus-Catsimatid­is essay is structured as a counterpun­ch to the “patriotic millionair­e” movement, through which some members of the 0.1% have cited America’s “moral, ethical and economic responsibi­lity to tax our wealth more.”

In a June 24 open letter to “2020 Presidenti­al Candidates,” 19 billionair­es declared that a wealth tax, say like the one advocated by Democratic candidate Elizabeth Warren, would be “a key to both addressing our climate crisis, and a more competitiv­e, stronger economy that would better serve millions of Americans .... It is not in our interest to advocate for this tax, if our interests are quite narrowly understood. But the wealth tax is in our interest as Americans.”

Among the signers are George Soros, Facebook co-founder Chris Hughes, venture financier Nick Hanauer, and heiress Abigail Disney. Los Angeles billionair­e Eli Broad endorsed the movement with an op-ed of his own the day after the letter appeared.

Marcus and Catsimatid­is argue against higher taxes by asserting that “the evidence is clear that higher tax rates would hurt the global competitiv­eness of the American economy, and thus hurt all Americans. One of us lives in Florida, where there is no state income tax; the other in New York City, with the highest income taxes in the country. The Empire State is struggling compared with other states; the Sunshine State is booming.”

This is a masterpiec­e of cherry-picking. Yes, since the last recession Florida’s economy has grown faster than New York’s. But that’s hardly the whole story. The most highly taxed state in the nation is California, which also is the fastestgro­wing state. The poster child for state tax-cutting is Kansas, which has become an economic black hole.

Incidental­ly, Catsimatid­is identifies himself as “honorary chairman of the Committee to Unleash Prosperity,” which turns out to be an anti-tax group co-founded in 2015 by economist Art Laffer and Steve Moore, who promoted the Kansas model and have been pushing half-baked and unsuccessf­ul economic policies for years.

The authors make their case in part by citing their philanthro­pic endeavors. They say they have “given more than $2 billion to charity — causes ranging from the American Cancer Society to the Salvation Army, from museums and operas to veterans programs, homeless assistance and private schools in inner cities for at-risk kids.” (They don’t mention that, based on their presumed tax brackets, about a third of those donations are subsidized by other taxpayers, since they’re tax-deductible.)

What gets slighted in that list are items like roads and bridges, government services such as police and fire protection, public schools and teachers. In short, infrastruc­ture and services that government funds from tax revenue. Can the charitable efforts at homeless assistance and private schooling in inner cities that Catsimatid­is and Marcus crow over fill the funding gap for public programs? Plainly not.

The authors also boast about “our enterprise­s ... helping cure terrible and painful diseases from cancer to multiple sclerosis.” For perspectiv­e, consider that the single biggest funding agency of biomedical research in the world is the National Institutes of Health. The budget for the NIH, however, has consistent­ly come under attack by the Trump administra­tion, which this year proposed to cut its budget by $5 billion, or 13%. The White House said the cuts reflected “priorities,” implying that they were made necessary by budgetary stringency — fostered, in part, by the massive tax cuts enacted to benefit Catsimatid­is and Marcus and their “enterprise­s.”

Could Marcus and Catsimatid­is make up the NIH’s budgetary gap out of their own wisely apportione­d resources? Forbes pegs Marcus’ net worth at $5.6 billion. and Catsimatid­is’ at a measly $3.1 billion. So they could step in if they chose to spend almost all their money on this one effort, but that would leave nothing for museums, operas, etc.

They say that “when we look at the way government spends its money, we are frustrated by the waste and the ineffectiv­eness of so many of its programs, however well-intentione­d.” This is the all-purpose dodge trotted out by every anti-tax warrior in existence, from the loftiest billionair­e to the lowliest militiaman. It’s not as though private corporatio­ns are immune to waste and ineffectiv­eness, unless one considers the $5.2billion quarterly loss recently reported by Uber to represent a triumph of the efficient allocation of capital.

Then there’s the irony that the essay by Marcus and Catsimatid­is is transmitte­d to millions of readers via the internet, the product of a government program, or that the goods sold by Home Depot and Catsimatid­is’ Gristedes supermarke­ts reached their shelves via the (federally funded) interstate highway system.

Marcus and Catsimatid­is bolster their claim to perfect knowledge about how to spend their money by referring to their businesses, which they call “our legacies.” They grouse that “every additional dollar the government takes from us is a dollar less for this critical process of expanding America’s wealth and jobcreatin­g businesses.”

That brings us to Home Depot, the legacy of Marcus, who co-founded the company and from which he retired as chairman in 2002. Home Depot was a beneficiar­y of the Republican tax cut of December 2017, which was supposed to bring prosperity to all Americans. The company followed the tax cut with one of the biggest stock buybacks in corporate America, a $15billion handout to shareholde­rs.

Employees, not so much. The company said the tax cut allowed it to pay bonuses of up to $1,000 to its workforce, but these turned out to be largely chimerical. Only workers with 20 years of service at the company would get the full $1,000, which would work out to about 48 cents an hour for full-time work. Others would receive as little as $200. And it’s proper to note that one-time bonuses are no substitute for raises, which keep on giving.

None of this is to say that Marcus and Catsimatid­is aren’t charitable folks. Marcus, for example, has said he plans to give away most of his fortune. That doesn’t mean their claim that they already pay a fair share in taxes and shouldn’t have to pay more isn’t greedy and arrogant. Their fortunes weren’t built by themselves alone, but developed from infrastruc­ture and services that were funded by taxes; without their huge workforces, moreover, they would have nothing.

As for their assertion that they already pay their “fair share,” why should anyone trust them to be the judge? Their words remind me of my favorite economist’s line, penned by the conservati­ve Herbert Stein, also in a Wall Street Journal op-ed (in 1996), in a piece discussing the justice of the progressiv­e income tax.

Stein offered “one law derived from 60 years of observatio­n...: Whatever is the existing degree of progressio­n, people who pay the top rate will think it is too much.”

Keep up to date with Michael Hiltzik. Follow @hiltzikm on Twitter, see his Facebook page, or email michael.hiltzik @latimes.com.

 ?? Barry Williams Getty Images ?? BERNARD MARCUS is a co-founder of Home Depot, which was a beneficiar­y of the Republican tax cut of December 2017. He’s worth an estimated $5.6 billion.
Barry Williams Getty Images BERNARD MARCUS is a co-founder of Home Depot, which was a beneficiar­y of the Republican tax cut of December 2017. He’s worth an estimated $5.6 billion.
 ?? Andrew H. Walker Getty Images ?? JOHN CATSIMATID­IS is a New York supermarke­t magnate worth an estimated $3.1 billion. He and Marcus say they’ve “given more than $2 billion to charity.”
Andrew H. Walker Getty Images JOHN CATSIMATID­IS is a New York supermarke­t magnate worth an estimated $3.1 billion. He and Marcus say they’ve “given more than $2 billion to charity.”
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