The Guardian (USA)

Biden targets America’s wealthiest with proposed minimum tax on billionair­es

- Dominic Rushe

Joe Biden proposed a new tax on America’s richest households when he unveiled his latest budget on Monday.

The Biden administra­tion wants to impose a 20% minimum tax on households worth more than $100m. The proposal would raise more than $360bn over the next decade and “would make sure that the wealthiest Americans no longer pay a tax rate lower than teachers and firefighte­rs”, according to a factsheet released by the White House.

The plan – called the “billionair­e minimum income tax” – is the administra­tion’s most aggressive move to date to tax the very wealthiest Americans.

The tax is part of Biden’s $5.8tn budget proposal for 2023, which also sets aside billions for the police and military as well as investment­s in affordable housing, plans to tackle the US’s supply chain issues and gun violence.

“Budgets are statements of values, and the budget I am releasing today sends a clear message that we value fiscal responsibi­lity, safety and security at home and around the world, and the investment­s needed to continue our equitable growth and build a better America,” Biden said in a statement.

Billionair­e wealth grew significan­tly during the coronaviru­s pandemic, helped by soaring share prices and a tax regime that charges investors less on their gains than those taxed on their income.

“In 2021 alone, America’s more than 700 billionair­es saw their wealth increase by $1tn, yet in a typical year, billionair­es like these would pay just 8% of their total realized and unrealized income in taxes. A firefighte­r or teacher can pay double that tax rate,” the White House factsheet notes.

Under the plan households worth more than $100m would have to give detailed accounts to the Internal Revenue Service of how their assets had fared over the year. Those who pay less than 20% on those gains would then be subject to an additional tax that would take their rate up to 20%.

The Biden administra­tion calculates that the tax would affect only the top 0.01% of American households, those worth over $100m, and that more than half the revenue would come from households worth more than $1bn.

The budget also looks set to tackle another issue that some economists have argued contribute­s to widening income inequality: share buybacks.

In recent years cash-rich companies including Apple, Alphabet, Meta and Microsoft, have used their funds to buy back huge quantities of their own shares, boosting their share price. Last year companies in the S&P 500 bought back a record $882bn of their own shares and Goldman Sachs estimates that figure will rise to $1tn this year.

Criticssay that the purchases divert money from hiring new staff, raising wages and research and developmen­t.

Research by the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) shows that there is “clear evidence that a substantia­l number of corporate executives today use buybacks as a chance to cash out”.

The Biden proposal would stop executives from selling their shares for three years after a buyback is announced.

Biden attempted to impose a 1% tax on share buybacks last year but the proposal failed in Congress. Both Biden’s billionair­e tax and the share buyback proposal will also face tough opposition in Congress.

 ?? Photograph: Patrick Semansky/AP ?? Biden at the White House on Monday. The proposal is the administra­tion’s most aggressive move to date to tax the very wealthiest Americans.
Photograph: Patrick Semansky/AP Biden at the White House on Monday. The proposal is the administra­tion’s most aggressive move to date to tax the very wealthiest Americans.

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