种族化的税收不平等:财富、种族主义和美国的税收制度

IF 0.9 Q2 LAW
P. Strand, Nicholas A. Mirkay
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引用次数: 0

摘要

总的来说,自1980年以来,美国的税收制度(联邦、州和地方)越来越加剧了种族化的财富不平等。今天的税收制度是为了巩固基于种族的优势制度,这种制度是几个世纪以来的种族剥削和对财富的不平等获取所创造的。随着美国未来的面貌变得不那么白人化,整个美国的税收制度,以及推动其从累进向递减转变的反税收言论,正在推动经济不平等和种族不平等。更深层次的是,税收制度正在抑制对未来主要资源——人力资本——的大规模公共投资。本文及时地呈现了过去40年来联邦和州税收的大趋势——既有长期的社会学观点(为什么),也有批判的税收观点(如何),从对财富征税到对收入征税再到对消费征税。这种税收累进率从高到低的转变对白人格外有利,而对黑人和其他有色人种造成了不成比例的负担。我们不关注特定扣除额或优惠税率的公平性,而是从整体和系统的角度看待税收,重点关注州和地方税,这在关键的税收文献中通常没有提到。在对税收制度进行系统性改革以对抗财富不平等之前,承认财富不平等的种族化是基本的第一步。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Racialized Tax Inequity: Wealth, Racism, and The U.S. System of Taxation
As a whole, the U.S. tax system (federal, state and local) since 1980 has served more and more to increase racialized wealth inequality. The tax system is today operating to entrench the system of advantage based on race that centuries of racial exploitation and unequal access to wealth created. As the future face of the nation becomes less White, the U.S. tax system as a whole and the anti-tax rhetoric that has fueled its shift from progressive to regressive are driving economic inequality and racial inequity. More deeply, the tax system is inhibiting broad-scale public investment in the primary resource of the future: human capital. This article presents a timely perspective of big-picture trends in federal and state taxation over the past 40 years — both a long-term sociological view (the why) of the historical racialization of wealth and a critical tax view (the how) of the shift from taxes on wealth to taxes on income to taxes on consumption. This shift from greater to less progressivity in taxes disproportionately benefits Whites while disproportionately burdening Blacks and other People of Color. Instead of focusing on the equity of a particular deduction or preferential tax rate, we view taxes holistically and systemically, with a focus on state and local taxes that is typically not addressed in critical tax literature. Before systematic changes can be made to tax systems to combat wealth inequality, an acknowledgement of the racialization of wealth inequality is a fundamental first step.
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