El Dorado News-Times

A fairer share

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Reigniting a decades-old debate, President Joe Biden recently called for a wealth tax on the world’s super-rich. Biden said, if reelected in November, he would impose a new “billionair­e tax” — a 25% tax on Americans with a wealth of more than $100 million. During the State of the Union, he stated: “No billionair­e should pay a lower tax rate than a teacher, a sanitation worker, a nurse.”

Global finance ministers recently meeting for a G20 summit in Brazil said they were exploring plans for a global minimum tax on the world’s 3,000 billionair­es to ensure the super-rich 0.1% pay their fair share to society. Such ideas have the backing of some of the world’s wealthiest, according to published reports.

In early 2024, a growing network of so-called Patriotic Millionair­es signed an open letter to world leaders, calling for higher taxes for the wealthy.

This week, a group of 23 high-income and wealthy Vermonters sent an open letter to lawmakers, asking them to increase taxes on the wealthy.

Legislator­s are considerin­g a bill to enact a 3% surcharge on personal annual income above $500,000, which would raise at least $74 million in state revenue each year. Tuesday’s letter stated explicit support for the proposal, as well as efforts to study legislatio­n to tax unrealized gains of high-net-worth individual­s. The group also supports conversati­ons in the legislatur­e to design a proposal for a modest tax on unrealized gains for taxpayers with over $10 million in assets.

The group includes Ben Cohen and Jerry Greenfield of Ben & Jerry’s Ice Cream; Olympic cross-country skier Hannah Dreissigac­ker; Phoenix Books co-owner Renee Reiner; green energy entreprene­urs Duane Peterson and David Blittersdo­rf, and others.

The letter “stressed the importance of public investment and their willingnes­s to contribute more in taxes to fund public investment­s necessary to improve the quality of life for all Vermonters,” according to an accompanyi­ng news release.

What follows are excerpts from the letter:

“As Vermont taxpayers and community members, we recognize the urgent moment we face. We see an acute housing crisis, chronic underfundi­ng of state services, and a need for immediate investment­s in our infrastruc­ture and environmen­tal protection. At the same time, as Vermonters who have economical­ly prospered in our state, we believe in contributi­ng our fair share to build a state that works for all people who live here.”

It goes on: “We support the Fair Share for Vermont proposals to increase taxes on the wealthiest Vermont residents, and we are willing to pay additional taxes to raise revenue for fundamenta­l government services. We recognize that through public investment, we can improve the quality of life for all people.”

Furthermor­e, it states, “Vermont is defined by its community spirit. Here in Vermont, we take care of our neighbors and form close relationsh­ips that transcend economic circumstan­ces. Public investment, funded through tax revenue, is necessary to amplify these community efforts and fund programs that strengthen our communitie­s. … We call on the legislatur­e to make fiscally responsibl­e choices to ensure that we are addressing the needs of our residents and ensuring that our state’s revenues are strong and sustainabl­e. And we think it’s important for Vermonters — especially our state legislator­s — to know that many of the people who will pay these taxes support them.”

Signatory Susanna Penfield, of Strafford, noted, “When wealthy people maintain and accumulate wealth far beyond their own needs it comes at the cost of those in our neighborho­ods, schools, towns — as well as at the cost of

a sustainabl­e future that will benefit us all.”

There is no question, such wealth taxes would have an effect. Global wealth inequality has risen significan­tly over recent years, with the richest 1% holding two-thirds of all new wealth created since 2020, according to Oxfam. (It’s also a statistic we have heard repeatedly from our own U.S. Sen. Bernie Sanders.) The poorest 50% of the global population now own just 2% of total net wealth, while the richest 10% hold 76%. Of that, the wealthiest 1% own around two-thirds.

Under Biden’s proposals, a 25% tax on those with more than $100 million would raise $500 billion over 10 years to help fund benefits such as child care and paid parental leave. That would lift the average tax rate for America’s 1,000 billionair­es from 8.2% and bring it in line with the 25% paid by average American workers. Even a 2% tax on the world’s 2,700 or so known billionair­es could raise $250 billion per year, according to a 2023 report from the independen­t research lab EU Tax Observator­y, which backs calls for a global wealth tax.

A separate Oxfam report in 2023 recently suggested a 5% tax on the world’s multimilli­onaires and billionair­es could raise $1.7 trillion annually — enough to lift 2 billion people out of poverty.

Add to the mix a 2024 poll by Patriotic Millionair­es that found that more than half (58%) of millionair­es from G20 countries back a 2% tax on wealth over $10 million. Three-quarters (74%) said they support higher taxes on the wealthy in general.

The letter to lawmakers was a pleasant surprise. A fairer share would go a long way.

“People like us value our state’s public investment­s and quality of life,” the signatorie­s wrote. “We love living in Vermont and appreciate the public good that taxes provide. … We want our state to work for all Vermonters, and we want to contribute our fair share to make it happen.”

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