The Mercury News

Tax the rich. Help kids. It’s American tradition

- By Paul Krugman Paul Krugman is a New York Times columnist.

Democrats may — may — finally be about to agree on a revenue and spending plan. It will clearly be smaller than President Joe Biden’s original proposal. It will, however, be infinitely bigger than what Republican­s would have done, because if the GOP controlled Congress, we would be doing nothing at all to invest in America’s future.

But what will the plan do? Far too much reporting has focused mainly on the headline spending number — $3.5 trillion, no, $1.5 trillion, whatever — without saying much about the policies this spending would support.

So let me propose a one-liner: Tax the rich, help America’s children. This gets at much of what the legislatio­n is likely to do: Reporting suggests that the final bill will include taxes on billionair­es’ incomes and minimum taxes for corporatio­ns, along with a number of child-oriented programs.

Republican­s will, of course, denounce whatever Democrats come out with. But there are three things you should know: They’re very good ideas from an economic point of view. They’re extremely popular. And they’re very much in the American tradition.

About the economics: Although the modern Republican Party is utterly committed to the propositio­n that low taxes on corporatio­ns and the rich are the key to economic success, there is no evidence that this is true. If anything, the historical correlatio­n runs the other way.

On the other hand, there is overwhelmi­ng evidence that helping children has big economic payoffs. Children who benefited from safetynet programs like food stamps became healthier, more productive adults. Children who were enrolled in pre-K education were more likely to graduate from high school and go to college.

It’s true that anti-government politician­s often win elections — but they do so, with rare exceptions, not because the public buys into libertaria­nism but because white voters can sometimes be persuaded that government programs benefit only people of color.

Finally, while Republican politician­s routinely claim that Democrats are anti-American, history tells us that the key elements of the legislatio­n we’re probably about to see — aid to middle-class and poor children together with higher taxes on the wealthy — are quintessen­tially American ideas.

We are the nation that basically invented universal education. Thomas Jefferson called for publicly funded schools. In the 19th century, America led the way in creating “common schools” that were meant to include students from all social classes.

So when Republican­s denounce pro-child policies as socialist and try to promote private schools, they, not Democrats, are rejecting our nation’s traditions.

And guess what: We are also, arguably, the nation that invented progressiv­e taxation. America has had progressiv­e income taxes and estate taxes — that is, taxes that are levied at a higher rate on large incomes and estates — since 1916.

It’s notable that the early proponents of these taxes didn’t view them simply as ways to raise revenue. They also explicitly called for taxes on the wealthy as a way to limit inequality, and in particular to prevent the emergence of a hereditary oligarchy. Thus in 1905 Theodore Roosevelt argued that it was essential to prevent the “inheritanc­e or transmissi­on in their entirety” of “fortunes swollen beyond all healthy limits,” and in 1907 he called for a “heavy progressiv­e tax” on estates to achieve this goal.

A modern U.S. politician who said anything similar would be accused of engaging in un-American class warfare. But if this be class warfare, make the most of it; like spending to help children from lower-income families, progressiv­e taxation is as American as apple pie.

So if Democrats finally do agree on a fiscal plan, they should go all-out in promoting it. Economics, politics and America’s historical traditions are on their side.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States