Wealthy = assets. Taxes typically are on income, not assets.
Better question: Do America's 400 highest-earning families pay a lower tax rate than the average taxpayer?
I mean, it still could be the same answer, because in any given year, the highest earners may well have a large chunk of it from capital gains. But at least it's an apples-to-apples comparison (until we implement a wealth tax).
I don't know the answer here. But this analysis includes a "comprehensive measure of their income that includes income from unsold stock".
Should unsold stock (or land value) gains be taxed? A couple of problems I can think of:
Fluctuations in stock values. From 1986 yo 2019 stocks have increased up to 37% and decreased by up 22% in a year (1).
Dillution of ownership:
If you taxed stock values over time, founders would have their ownership rate dilluted over time. Is it desirable to have founders automatically lose their majority share over time? e.g. I'm thinking of the effect of a 3% wealth tax.
The analysis doesn't include company taxes:
If a company is taxed at 21% of it's profits. Should this count towards the tax paid by the richest?
Should investments in capacity/capital be taxed at the same rate as profit. Often a company increases in value as it reinvests its income in productive assets. Should that be encouraged and given a tax break or not?
My current thinking is the 20th century system worked well before companies with strong network effects started making monopoly type profits and globalization allowed companies to invest surpluses outside of their home markets changed the game.
The problem is that no matter how you structure the rules, the wealthy will always be 1. connected and 2. able to hire the best accountants in the world. It’s impossible to get that money from them in my opinion. Your best hope is to incentivize them to spend it somehow.
It would change at least this much: The next 400 richest families would immediately move themselves and their assets to somewhere that didn't confiscate like that.
Solution: cut taxes for average taxpayers, balancing the budget by cutting spending. Everyone has a favorite program, so to make it politically easy, just cut every program by the same rate.
At the turn of the last century, government spending was something around 3% of GDP. Today, it's about 36%. This figure goes way up whenever there is a new war or entitlement program. It can be cut.
[+] [-] AnimalMuppet|4 years ago|reply
Better question: Do America's 400 highest-earning families pay a lower tax rate than the average taxpayer?
I mean, it still could be the same answer, because in any given year, the highest earners may well have a large chunk of it from capital gains. But at least it's an apples-to-apples comparison (until we implement a wealth tax).
[+] [-] alexitorg|4 years ago|reply
Should unsold stock (or land value) gains be taxed? A couple of problems I can think of:
Fluctuations in stock values. From 1986 yo 2019 stocks have increased up to 37% and decreased by up 22% in a year (1).
Dillution of ownership: If you taxed stock values over time, founders would have their ownership rate dilluted over time. Is it desirable to have founders automatically lose their majority share over time? e.g. I'm thinking of the effect of a 3% wealth tax.
The analysis doesn't include company taxes: If a company is taxed at 21% of it's profits. Should this count towards the tax paid by the richest?
Should investments in capacity/capital be taxed at the same rate as profit. Often a company increases in value as it reinvests its income in productive assets. Should that be encouraged and given a tax break or not?
My current thinking is the 20th century system worked well before companies with strong network effects started making monopoly type profits and globalization allowed companies to invest surpluses outside of their home markets changed the game.
(1) https://www.thebalance.com/stock-market-returns-by-year-2388...
[+] [-] ScottMann|4 years ago|reply
[+] [-] sjtindell|4 years ago|reply
[+] [-] AnimalMuppet|4 years ago|reply
[+] [-] eyeball|4 years ago|reply
how would the income distribution change if it were 100% confiscated and distributed to everyone else evenly?
[+] [-] AnimalMuppet|4 years ago|reply
[+] [-] maxharris|4 years ago|reply
At the turn of the last century, government spending was something around 3% of GDP. Today, it's about 36%. This figure goes way up whenever there is a new war or entitlement program. It can be cut.