WASHINGTON – Aโข growing โchorus of wealthyโฃ Americans is publicly advocating for higherโฃ taxes on themselves, arguing that current โคtax structures exacerbate wealth inequality โขand threaten the foundations of American democracy and economic stability. This movement,comprised โof millionairesโค and billionaires,proposes basicโ shifts in how โthe U.S. โคtaxes income and wealth, including โขtaxing unrealized capital โขgains and reinstatingโ top marginalโฃ tax ratesโค notโค seen โsince the mid-20th โคcentury.
For โขdecades, the American tax โฃsystem has increasingly favored those atโฃ the veryโ top,โข allowing wealth to concentrate in the hands of a shrinking โคelite. this trend isn’t simply a matter of fairness; it posesโ a systemic risk to the nation’sโข economic healthโข and democratic institutions. By rethinking taxation, proponents believe trillions of dollarsโข in โขcurrentlyโฃ untaxed wealth can be unlockedโ to fund public goods and โคcreate โa more equitable society.
President โฃBiden has proposed a Billionaire Minimum Income Tax, designed to tax theโข unrealized capital gains of the wealthiest households. โขOthers are championing wealth taxesโฃ specifically targeting billionaires. These โฃproposalsโฃ aim to address a key loophole in the current system where wealth appreciation isn’t taxed until assets are sold, allowingโฃ theโ ultra-rich to defer or avoid taxes indefinitely.
Currently, the U.S. income tax is capped at aโค top rate of 37% for income exceeding $578,125 for individuals (or $693,750 forโฃ marriedโ couples). Advocates argue โฃthis flatโข rate fails to reflect the โvast difference between high โearners and theโ ultra-wealthy. Someone โearning $600,000 lives a comfortable life, but their financial reality is drastically different from someone earning $600 million annually.
To address this disparity, proponents suggest โa return to top marginal โtax rates seen during the 20th century’s most prosperous decades, coupled โwith the addition of significantly more tax โคbrackets. Some propose rates reaching upโค to 90% forโ individuals earning over $100 million per year.
These โคchanges, while not a panacea for โขall of the nation’s challenges, areโ viewed asโข crucial steps toward reversing the flow โขof wealth towardsโข aโค select few and fostering a moreโ stable democracy and economy. The tax โคcode, they contend,โข isโฃ a powerful instrument for social and economic change, and it’s time to wield itโข more effectively.