The Bakersfield Californian

Raise revenues, but hold the drama

- Follow Froma Harrop on Twitter @FromaHarro­p. She can be reached at fharrop@gmail.com.

Democratic candidates offer two basic approaches to raising revenues for public programs. One is grand opera — accusing the wealthy of greed (Bernie Sanders) and malice, that is, “leaving everyone else behind” (Elizabeth Warren). For this bad behavior, there must be punishment in the form of taxation.

The other approach is to simply increase their taxes a reasonable amount and not get personal. Many rich people may not like it, but they won’t feel under moral condemnati­on. Some even back the idea. That is Joe Biden’s approach. And it was the way Democratic Presidents Barack Obama and Bill Clinton succeeded in raising taxes on the higher income.

Warren swings between the relatively benign “good for you for being rich” and telling them to “pitch in (only) 2 cents” and naming malefactor­s she’s singled out for hurt. One TV ad flashes hedge fund manager Leon Cooperman and the words “charged with insider trading.” Cooperman happens to be one of my least favorite billionair­es, but being a billionair­e is not in itself a criminal offense.

( The 2 cents refers to her proposed wealth tax that would place a 2 percent tax on household assets above $50 million and 6 percent on assets over $1 billion. A wealth tax would be hard to levy because how do you set a value on Picassos and a ski chalet?)

Sanders is less subtle. He’s called for the eradicatio­n of billionair­es. You can Google the particular­s.

Polls show that most Americans, and from both parties, want the top earners to pay more taxes. The basic concept is solid in all but the most hardened plutocrati­c circles. More importantl­y, it is also good policy, given the extraordin­ary tax cuts bestowed on the ultrawealt­hy by President Donald Trump and his Republican helpers in Congress — and the massive deficits they are feeding.

Biden’s tax proposals draw almost no attention because they aren’t accompanie­d by denunciati­ons of the rich, thunder, lightning and threats. Let’s examine his proposals.

First off, Biden would return the top income bracket to 39.6 percent. ( Trump had it lowered to 37 percent.) He would apply that higher rate only to income above $510,000. He would also adjust upward the capital gains tax for those earning more than $1 million.

Biden would increase the corporate tax rate to 28 percent from Trump’s ridiculous­ly low 21 percent. That would still leave it well below the 35 percent on the books when Trump took office. Bear in mind there was bipartisan agreement that the 35 percent tax was high by internatio­nal standards and needed to be lowered.

Another solid Biden idea is an alternativ­e minimum tax that would be applied to U.S. companies that shift profits abroad to avoid U.S. taxes. We’re talking to you, Amazon and Apple.

❚❚ From a practical standpoint, Biden would be raising more money than either Warren or Sanders because he can get elected and they can’t.

And this should get LOTS of attention: Biden would repeal the tax hike Trump and his Republican allies thrust on ordinary Americans, mainly in blue states. That is, state and local taxes would again be totally deductible and not subject to Trump’s $10,000 limit. The feds should not be taxing money people already paid in taxes.

Put together, Biden’s changes are projected to raise about $2 trillion over a decade. The revenues would go to infrastruc­ture, health care and fighting carbon emissions.

From a practical standpoint, Biden would be raising more money than either Warren or Sanders because he can get elected and they can’t. His proposals are also far more politicall­y doable — in part because they are more modest, in part because he doesn’t demonize anyone.

So let’s place a bedsheet over the guillotine and put the pitchforks back in the garage. Histrionic­s are counterpro­ductive. Democrats should choose Biden or another moderate and get it done.

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FROMA HARROP

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