The Commercial Appeal

An ordinary average wealthy guy

PAUL KRUGMAN PAUL KRUGMAN.

-

Romney’s tax dance is doing us a service by highlighti­ng the unjust and expensive favors showered on the upper-upper class, says

CALL ME PECULIAR, but I’m actually enjoying the spectacle of Mitt Romney doing the Dance of the Seven Veils — partly out of voyeurism, of course, but also because it’s about time that we had this discussion.

The theme of his dance, for those who haven’t been paying attention, is taxes — his own taxes. Although disclosure of tax returns is standard practice for political candidates, Romney has never done so, and, at first , he tried to stonewall the issue even in a presidenti­al race. Then he said that he probably pays only about 15 percent of his income in taxes, and he hinted that he might release his 2011 return.

Even then, however, he will face pressure to release previous returns, too — like his father, who released 12 years of returns back when he made his presidenti­al run. (The elder Romney, by the way, paid 37 percent of his income in taxes).

And the public has a right to see the back years: By 2011, with the campaign looming, Romney may have rearranged his portfolio to minimize awkward issues like his accounts in the Cayman Islands or his use of the justly reviled “carried interest” tax break.

But the larger question isn’t what Mitt Romney’s tax returns have to say about Mitt Romney; it’s what they have to say about U.S. tax policy. Is there a good reason the rich should bear a startlingl­y light tax burden?

For they do. If Romney is telling the truth about his taxes, he’s actually more or less typical of the very wealthy. Since 1992, the IRS has been releasing income and tax data for the 400 highest-income filers. In 2008, the most recent year available, these filers paid only 18.1 percent of their income in federal income taxes; in 2007, they paid only 16.6 percent. When you bear in mind that the rich pay little either in payroll taxes or in state and local taxes — major burdens on middle - class families — this implies that the top 400 filers faced lower taxes than many ordinary workers.

The main reason the rich pay so little is that most of their income takes the form of capital gains, which are taxed at a maximum rate of 15 percent, far below the maximum on wages and salaries. So the question is whether capital gains — three - quarters of which go to the top 1 percent of the income distributi­on — warrant such special treatment.

Defenders of low taxes on the rich mainly make two arguments: that low taxes on capital gains are a time - honored principle, and that they are needed to promote economic growth and job creation. Both claims are false.

The days when the super-rich paid much higher taxes weren’t that long ago. Back in 1986, Ronald Reagan signed a tax reform equalizing top rates on earned income and capital gains at 28 percent. The rate rose further, to more than 29 percent, during Bill Clinton’s first term.

Low capital gains taxes date only from 1997, when Clinton struck a deal with Republican­s in Congress in which he cut taxes on the rich in return for creation of the Children’s Health Insurance Program. And today’s ultralow rates — the lowest since the days of Herbert Hoover — date only from 2003, when George W. Bush rammed both a tax cut on capital gains and a tax cut on dividends through Congress.

Correspond­ingly, the low-tax status of the very rich is also a recent developmen­t. During Clinton’s first term, the top 400 taxpayers paid close to 30 percent of their income in federal taxes, and even after his tax deal they paid substantia­lly more than they have since the 2003 cut.

So is it essential that the rich receive such a big tax break? There is a theoretica­l case for according special treatment to capital gains, but there are also theoretica­l and practical arguments against such special treatment. In particular, the huge gap between taxes on earned income and taxes on unearned income creates a perverse incentive to arrange one’s affairs so as to make income appear in the “right” category.

And the economic record certainly doesn’t support the notion that superlow taxes on the super-rich are the key to prosperity. During that first Clinton term, when the very rich paid much higher taxes than they do now, the economy added 11.5 million jobs, dwarfing anything achieved even during the good years of the Bush administra­tion.

So Romney’s tax dance is doing us all a service by highlighti­ng the unwise, unjust and expensive favors being showered on the upper-upper class. At a time when all the selfprocla­imed serious people are telling us that the poor and the middle class must suffer in the name of fiscal probity, such low taxes on the very rich are indefensib­le.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States