在最富有的人甚至把富人远远甩在后面,收入不平等加剧的情况下,美国的收入、继承和财富税框架

Y. Datta
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Facing job insecurity, rising health-care costs, the massive $1.75 trillion college loan debt, credit has become a palliative of the middle class to address the deeper anxieties of downward mobility.Many are unable to fulfill the “American Dream” because they cannot afford the middle class standard of living: having a good job, being able to retire in security, owning a home, having affordable health care, and a better future for their children.This inequality is now so vast that it is almost twice as high as in Europe.In 2017, an American CEO’s pay went up 361-times the median pay of a worker—by far the widest gap in the world.Because of an incentuous relationship between Washington and Wall Street, we have a tax code that has been hatched to reward wealthy individuals and corporations.Some of the world’s richest men paid just a tiny fraction of their income in federal tax in 2021. For the first time Trump’s tax cuts helped billionaires pay less than the working class.Many large U.S.-based multinational corporations employ accounting tricks to make profits made in America appear as if they were generated in offshore tax havens—with minimal or no taxes. Thus by using such a clever maneuver, multinationals are able to avoid paying an estimated $90 billion in federal income taxes each year,Encouraged by the Friedman doctrine, the 1970s represented a turning point when America took a sharp turn toward unfettered capitalism—and greed. American CEOs set themselves upon a journey toward maximizing shareholder value. And it is this radical ideology that has guided Ameican business over the last fifty years.This is a mind-set that encourages risk aversion and short-run behavior: an accountant’s short-cut to profits, with a focus on cost reduction, rather than long-term concerns about innovation, quality, and customer satisfaction. And it is this journey that has contributed so much to America’s industrial decline.A key development that has accelerated this decline is the financialization of America. In recent decades, the share of financial services has been about 7-8% of GDP. However, in sharp contrast, the sector accounts for 25-30% of all corporate profits. Yet, the sector has created only 4% of all jobs.In 1999 and 2000 America went through a massive deregulation of the financial markets, which proved to be disasterous, because it led--in 2008--to the worst stock-market crash in America since the Great Depression of 1929.Finance and its way of thinking have now come to permeate every facet of business, so much so that Wall Street is no longer supporting Main Street businesses that create jobs for the masses.As a result of this“cognitive capture,” while the policy decisions taken after 2008 crash resulted in huge gains for the financial industry, but losses for homeowners, small businesses, workers, and consumers. One of most depressing aftermaths of this crisis was that it wiped out $16 trillion in household wealth.The wealthy have compounded their wealth by stifling true, dynamic capitalism and making America no longer the land of opportunity that it once was. They have made America the most unequal, advanced industrial country while crippling growth, distorting key policy debates, and fomenting a divided society.The objective of this paper is to develop a federal-tax framework. Taxation is as much a political as an economic issue. There are two visions or schools of federal taxation. While one is grounded in lower taxes for the wealthy and the corporations; the other’s calling card is community: and shared prosperity. These two schools can be described as: (1) The School for the “Rich and the Privileged,” and (2) The School for the “Masses.”The former consists of three groups: (a)“Trickle-down” Economics; (b)“Supply-side Economics;” and (c)“Meritocracy” or the “Job Creators.”The latter has just one group: “Progressive Taxation.”We believe that a good way to judge the merits of the two schools of thought is to see their historic track record. So we looked at the economic history of America over the entire twentieth century. Economist John Kenneth Galbraith has called the “trickle-down” economics as the “horse-and-sparrow” theory. David Bradley argues, that another name for this theory should be “horse shit” economics.The “trickle-down” idea has a long pedigree, and has long been discredited. This is because higher inequality has not only not produced more growth, but, the median family income in America has been stagnant for almost a half century.The idea of “supply-side” economics was proposed under Ronald Reagan. This was based on the notion that emphasized deregulation and tax cuts: with the argument that this would free up the economy that would then lead to increase in the supply of goods and services—as well as incomes of individuals.This policy was in direct contradiction to Keynesian economic theory, according to which, aggregate demand--not supply--is the driving force in an economy.However, the idea did not work for Reagan. Neither did it work for Gorge W. Bush.Supporters of meritocracy try to peddle the myths that we are living in a meritocracy, in which great wealth is both earned and deserved. But what if the rich derive much of their income not from work they perform, but from the assets they own? Moreover, what if great wealth increasingly comes not from enterprise, but from inheritance?Presidential candidate Mitt Romney--and President, Bain Capital, a private equity firm--argued that 47 percent of Americans were paying no income tax. He said they were freeloaders because they were living off of government handouts. Ironically, Romney paid only 14% of his reported income as federal income tax in 2011: which is far less than what people with substantially less income paid. Second, the source of his income was Bain Capital. The private equity firms, like Bain Capital, are associated with offshore bank accounts and big corporate buyouts. In these buyouts, previously healthy firms are loaded up with debt, stripped of their assets, with mass layoffs, and after milking the firm’s assets are sold to the highest bidder.So, the reality is that it is people like Romney who are the real freeloaders.An important distinction we need to make is to recognize the difference between “Takers”: those stifling job creation, versus “Makers:” businesses that create real jobs.Finally, our analysis revealed that the “Rich and Priviledged” school consistently offered false promises that failed to materialize, but instead, produced big deficits. The birthplace of freedom—and progressive taxation--happens to be President FDR’s America. The years 1947-1973 are considered the golden years of America’s middle class. 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Facing job insecurity, rising health-care costs, the massive $1.75 trillion college loan debt, credit has become a palliative of the middle class to address the deeper anxieties of downward mobility.Many are unable to fulfill the “American Dream” because they cannot afford the middle class standard of living: having a good job, being able to retire in security, owning a home, having affordable health care, and a better future for their children.This inequality is now so vast that it is almost twice as high as in Europe.In 2017, an American CEO’s pay went up 361-times the median pay of a worker—by far the widest gap in the world.Because of an incentuous relationship between Washington and Wall Street, we have a tax code that has been hatched to reward wealthy individuals and corporations.Some of the world’s richest men paid just a tiny fraction of their income in federal tax in 2021. For the first time Trump’s tax cuts helped billionaires pay less than the working class.Many large U.S.-based multinational corporations employ accounting tricks to make profits made in America appear as if they were generated in offshore tax havens—with minimal or no taxes. Thus by using such a clever maneuver, multinationals are able to avoid paying an estimated $90 billion in federal income taxes each year,Encouraged by the Friedman doctrine, the 1970s represented a turning point when America took a sharp turn toward unfettered capitalism—and greed. American CEOs set themselves upon a journey toward maximizing shareholder value. And it is this radical ideology that has guided Ameican business over the last fifty years.This is a mind-set that encourages risk aversion and short-run behavior: an accountant’s short-cut to profits, with a focus on cost reduction, rather than long-term concerns about innovation, quality, and customer satisfaction. And it is this journey that has contributed so much to America’s industrial decline.A key development that has accelerated this decline is the financialization of America. In recent decades, the share of financial services has been about 7-8% of GDP. However, in sharp contrast, the sector accounts for 25-30% of all corporate profits. Yet, the sector has created only 4% of all jobs.In 1999 and 2000 America went through a massive deregulation of the financial markets, which proved to be disasterous, because it led--in 2008--to the worst stock-market crash in America since the Great Depression of 1929.Finance and its way of thinking have now come to permeate every facet of business, so much so that Wall Street is no longer supporting Main Street businesses that create jobs for the masses.As a result of this“cognitive capture,” while the policy decisions taken after 2008 crash resulted in huge gains for the financial industry, but losses for homeowners, small businesses, workers, and consumers. One of most depressing aftermaths of this crisis was that it wiped out $16 trillion in household wealth.The wealthy have compounded their wealth by stifling true, dynamic capitalism and making America no longer the land of opportunity that it once was. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

美国的收入不平等已经走了一个完整的循环,现在已经接近甚至超过了1929年大萧条前1928年记录的令人眩晕的收入高峰。另一方面,自1974年以来,中产阶级一直经历着无情的经济紧缩。中等家庭收入几乎半个世纪以来一直停滞不前。收入停滞并不能完全反映大多数美国人生活水平的下降。面对工作不稳定、不断上涨的医疗成本、1.75万亿美元的巨额大学贷款债务,信贷已经成为中产阶级缓解对向下流动的更深层次焦虑的一种手段。许多人无法实现“美国梦”,因为他们负担不起中产阶级的生活标准:有一份好工作,能够有保障的退休,拥有自己的房子,负担得起的医疗保健,为他们的孩子提供更好的未来。这种不平等现在是如此之大,几乎是欧洲的两倍。2017年,美国首席执行官的薪酬是普通工人薪酬中位数的361倍,是迄今为止全球薪酬差距最大的国家。由于华盛顿和华尔街之间存在着一种不正当的关系,我们的税法就是为了奖励富有的个人和公司而制定的。2021年,世界上一些最富有的人缴纳的联邦税只占其收入的一小部分。特朗普的减税政策第一次帮助亿万富翁比工人阶级支付更少的税款。许多总部设在美国的大型跨国公司采用会计手段,使在美国赚取的利润看起来好像是在离岸避税天堂产生的——几乎没有税。因此,通过使用这样一个聪明的策略,跨国公司能够避免每年支付大约900亿美元的联邦所得税。在弗里德曼学说的鼓励下,20世纪70年代是美国向不受约束的资本主义和贪婪急剧转向的转折点。美国的ceo们踏上了股东价值最大化的征程。在过去的50年里,正是这种激进的意识形态指引着美国的商业。这是一种鼓励风险规避和短期行为的思维模式:会计追求利润的捷径,专注于降低成本,而不是对创新、质量和客户满意度的长期关注。正是这段旅程对美国工业的衰落做出了巨大贡献。加速这种衰退的一个关键因素是美国的金融化。近几十年来,金融服务业占GDP的比重约为7-8%。然而,与之形成鲜明对比的是,该行业占所有企业利润的25-30%。然而,该行业只创造了4%的就业机会。1999年和2000年,美国对金融市场进行了大规模的放松管制,这被证明是灾难性的,因为它导致了2008年美国自1929年大萧条以来最严重的股市崩盘。金融及其思维方式现在已经渗透到商业的方方面面,以至于华尔街不再支持为大众创造就业机会的普通企业。由于这种“认知捕获”,2008年金融危机后采取的政策决定为金融业带来了巨大收益,但房主、小企业、工人和消费者却蒙受了损失。这场危机最令人沮丧的后果之一是家庭财富蒸发了16万亿美元。富人通过扼杀真正的、充满活力的资本主义,使美国不再是曾经的机会之地,从而使他们的财富更加丰富。他们使美国成为最不平等的先进工业国家,同时削弱了经济增长,扭曲了关键的政策辩论,并煽动了一个分裂的社会。本文的目的是建立一个联邦税收框架。税收既是一个经济问题,也是一个政治问题。联邦税收有两种观点或学派。一方面是为富人和企业减税;另一方的名片是社区和共同繁荣。这两个学派可以被描述为:(1)“富人和特权”学派和(2)“大众”学派。前者由三组组成:(a)“涓滴”经济学;(b)“供给侧经济学”和(c)“任人唯贤”或“就业创造者”。后者只有一个组:“累进税”。我们认为,判断这两种思想流派优劣的一个好方法是看它们的历史记录。我们来看看整个二十世纪美国的经济史。经济学家约翰·肯尼斯·加尔布雷斯把“涓滴”经济学称为“马和麻雀”理论。大卫•布拉德利认为,这一理论的另一个名称应该是“马屎”经济学。“涓滴效应”的观点由来已久,但长期以来一直受到质疑。这是因为更严重的不平等不仅没有带来更多的增长,而且美国家庭收入中位数几乎半个世纪以来一直停滞不前。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
A Framework for Income, Inheritance, and Wealth Tax in America amid Increasing Income Inequality when the Richest are Leaving even the Rich Far Behind
Income inequality in America has run a full circle, and has now touched or even exceeded the dizzying heights of income recorded in 1928 before the Geat Depression of 1929.On the other hand, the middle class has beeon undergoing a relentless economic squeeze since 1974. The median family income has literally been stagnant for almost half a century.Stagnant incomes do not fully reflect the decline in the standard of living of most Americans. Facing job insecurity, rising health-care costs, the massive $1.75 trillion college loan debt, credit has become a palliative of the middle class to address the deeper anxieties of downward mobility.Many are unable to fulfill the “American Dream” because they cannot afford the middle class standard of living: having a good job, being able to retire in security, owning a home, having affordable health care, and a better future for their children.This inequality is now so vast that it is almost twice as high as in Europe.In 2017, an American CEO’s pay went up 361-times the median pay of a worker—by far the widest gap in the world.Because of an incentuous relationship between Washington and Wall Street, we have a tax code that has been hatched to reward wealthy individuals and corporations.Some of the world’s richest men paid just a tiny fraction of their income in federal tax in 2021. For the first time Trump’s tax cuts helped billionaires pay less than the working class.Many large U.S.-based multinational corporations employ accounting tricks to make profits made in America appear as if they were generated in offshore tax havens—with minimal or no taxes. Thus by using such a clever maneuver, multinationals are able to avoid paying an estimated $90 billion in federal income taxes each year,Encouraged by the Friedman doctrine, the 1970s represented a turning point when America took a sharp turn toward unfettered capitalism—and greed. American CEOs set themselves upon a journey toward maximizing shareholder value. And it is this radical ideology that has guided Ameican business over the last fifty years.This is a mind-set that encourages risk aversion and short-run behavior: an accountant’s short-cut to profits, with a focus on cost reduction, rather than long-term concerns about innovation, quality, and customer satisfaction. And it is this journey that has contributed so much to America’s industrial decline.A key development that has accelerated this decline is the financialization of America. In recent decades, the share of financial services has been about 7-8% of GDP. However, in sharp contrast, the sector accounts for 25-30% of all corporate profits. Yet, the sector has created only 4% of all jobs.In 1999 and 2000 America went through a massive deregulation of the financial markets, which proved to be disasterous, because it led--in 2008--to the worst stock-market crash in America since the Great Depression of 1929.Finance and its way of thinking have now come to permeate every facet of business, so much so that Wall Street is no longer supporting Main Street businesses that create jobs for the masses.As a result of this“cognitive capture,” while the policy decisions taken after 2008 crash resulted in huge gains for the financial industry, but losses for homeowners, small businesses, workers, and consumers. One of most depressing aftermaths of this crisis was that it wiped out $16 trillion in household wealth.The wealthy have compounded their wealth by stifling true, dynamic capitalism and making America no longer the land of opportunity that it once was. They have made America the most unequal, advanced industrial country while crippling growth, distorting key policy debates, and fomenting a divided society.The objective of this paper is to develop a federal-tax framework. Taxation is as much a political as an economic issue. There are two visions or schools of federal taxation. While one is grounded in lower taxes for the wealthy and the corporations; the other’s calling card is community: and shared prosperity. These two schools can be described as: (1) The School for the “Rich and the Privileged,” and (2) The School for the “Masses.”The former consists of three groups: (a)“Trickle-down” Economics; (b)“Supply-side Economics;” and (c)“Meritocracy” or the “Job Creators.”The latter has just one group: “Progressive Taxation.”We believe that a good way to judge the merits of the two schools of thought is to see their historic track record. So we looked at the economic history of America over the entire twentieth century. Economist John Kenneth Galbraith has called the “trickle-down” economics as the “horse-and-sparrow” theory. David Bradley argues, that another name for this theory should be “horse shit” economics.The “trickle-down” idea has a long pedigree, and has long been discredited. This is because higher inequality has not only not produced more growth, but, the median family income in America has been stagnant for almost a half century.The idea of “supply-side” economics was proposed under Ronald Reagan. This was based on the notion that emphasized deregulation and tax cuts: with the argument that this would free up the economy that would then lead to increase in the supply of goods and services—as well as incomes of individuals.This policy was in direct contradiction to Keynesian economic theory, according to which, aggregate demand--not supply--is the driving force in an economy.However, the idea did not work for Reagan. Neither did it work for Gorge W. Bush.Supporters of meritocracy try to peddle the myths that we are living in a meritocracy, in which great wealth is both earned and deserved. But what if the rich derive much of their income not from work they perform, but from the assets they own? Moreover, what if great wealth increasingly comes not from enterprise, but from inheritance?Presidential candidate Mitt Romney--and President, Bain Capital, a private equity firm--argued that 47 percent of Americans were paying no income tax. He said they were freeloaders because they were living off of government handouts. Ironically, Romney paid only 14% of his reported income as federal income tax in 2011: which is far less than what people with substantially less income paid. Second, the source of his income was Bain Capital. The private equity firms, like Bain Capital, are associated with offshore bank accounts and big corporate buyouts. In these buyouts, previously healthy firms are loaded up with debt, stripped of their assets, with mass layoffs, and after milking the firm’s assets are sold to the highest bidder.So, the reality is that it is people like Romney who are the real freeloaders.An important distinction we need to make is to recognize the difference between “Takers”: those stifling job creation, versus “Makers:” businesses that create real jobs.Finally, our analysis revealed that the “Rich and Priviledged” school consistently offered false promises that failed to materialize, but instead, produced big deficits. The birthplace of freedom—and progressive taxation--happens to be President FDR’s America. The years 1947-1973 are considered the golden years of America’s middle class. The foundation of this goldilocks economy was the social covenant of shared prosperity, based on President Kennedy’s dictum--that “a rising tide lifts all boats.” Its main features were: powerful unions, a high minimum wage, progressive taxation, and corporations providing health and retirement benefits.
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