Why a Wealth Tax Is a Bad Idea
Billionaires are better at figuring out what to do with their money than the government will ever be.

The president's budget is the lawmaking equivalent of a vision board or a mission statement: a moderately delusional wish list that is intended to provide motivation. The president's budget is never legally binding—Congress still retains some tenuous grip on the purse strings—but it is always instructive.
President Joe Biden has long been, in the immortal words of Editor at Large Matt Welch, a rusty weather vane, creaking reluctantly in the direction that the winds of his party blow. With his new budget proposal, the breezes have finally brought us to the shores of a serious wealth tax debate.
Biden isn't calling his proposal a wealth tax, of course. It's the "Billionaire Minimum Income Tax," and it imposes a minimum 20 percent tax on the income of households with more than—oddly—$100 million in wealth. Biden's proposal is smaller and more pragmatic than the earlier variants from Sens. Bernie Sanders (I–Vt.) and Elizabeth Warren (D–Mass.)—par for the course with Biden. Most notable is that even with implausibly optimistic estimates of the federal government's ability to collect, the whole mess is supposed to raise an average of a mere $36 billion per year over the next 10 years.
The University of California, Berkeley, economist and Warren adviser Gabriel Zucman estimated what several billionaires would pay under the plan's 20 percent tax on unrealized gains in illiquid assets, pinning Jeff Bezos' bill at $35 billion, Warren Buffett's at $26 billion, and Jim Walton's at $7 billion.
Anyone who has been paying the slightest bit of attention to federal spending over the last several years knows that figures that begin with b instead of t are now considered rounding errors. The point of this wealth tax is not to raise revenue. It has two rather different aims.
The first is pure political calculus. A floundering, unpopular president seeks to demonstrate a willingness to punish a small, unpopular class of people. A Reuters/Ipsos poll last year found that nearly two-thirds of respondents agree that the very rich should pay more taxes: 64 percent either strongly or somewhat agreed that "the very rich should contribute an extra share of their total wealth each year to support public programs."
In attacking Sen. Joe Manchin (D–W. Va.), who continues to stand athwart the Democratic Party's worst ideas vaguely muttering "stop," The New Yorker described agglomerations of wealth as "unsightly," which captures the spirit of the thing quite nicely. There are many things the federal government could do if it wanted fewer wealthy people, but none would be so satisfying as simply making a point of taking more each year from the edible rich.
The second aim, which has more far-reaching consequences, is to establish the principle that the U.S. government can tax based on wealth at all. If such a tax were to be put into law—and found constitutional by the Supreme Court, which would be no mean feat—it would be the thin end of a very large wedge. Biden's proposal will spin up the huge bureaucratic, legal, and accounting support systems, public and private, necessary to support the formal tracking of wealth alongside income.
The utility of permitting individuals to accumulate large amounts of money varies from person to person, of course. There are many billionaires whose fortunes are extractive or confiscatory—that is, they have seized a larger slice of an unchanged pie. But in the U.S. in particular, we specialize in billionaires whose fortunes are clearly related to value creation—that is, they have taken a healthy slice of a pie that they also made much larger.
Sanders and others seem determined to conflate these two groups, applying the term oligarchs to, among others, people whose houses have an excessive number of bathrooms, people who build rockets, and people who own Major League Baseball teams.
People do not need to have been wholly self-made to somehow deserve to keep their money. No billionaire is an island, even if many of them own one. In fact, vanishingly few of us have fates that are wholly self-determined.
As a moral matter, if not a legal one, we might ask what the very rich do with their money as a way of evaluating whether they should keep it. As famously rich person Elon Musk recently tweeted: "Working hard to make useful products & services for your fellow humans is deeply morally good." Many who support wealth taxes seem to hold the belief that the government would use the resources that the very wealthy command toward more valuable ends. Of course, most of the fortunes of billionaires such as the Waltons, or Musk, or Bezos are tied up in the large and extremely productive firms that made them rich in the first place.
A dollar knocking around the Walmart balance sheet is almost certainly doing more good than that same dollar in the hands of the U.S. Treasury. Walmart sells goods and services people value and voluntarily purchase, as well as providing income to millions of people around the world, and offers health insurance coverage to nearly a million of its workers. Perhaps you don't think Walmart does those things at the quantity and quality you would prefer—but then again, neither does the U.S. government. And Walmart incarcerates no one, wages no wars, and incurs no debt that must be paid by future generations.
Very rich people also tend to give to charitable causes. You might object that they donate frivolously to the opera, give to already well-endowed universities, or otherwise participate in philanthropy with limited public benefit, perhaps in pursuit of status or invitations to fancy parties. The federal government has been known to do the very same; recall that some pandemic relief money went to Washington, D.C.'s Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, for instance, and that the federal government poured $148 billion into higher education in 2018.
But with their discretionary dollars, the very wealthy are more likely to give to charities that focus on minimizing suffering internationally, where a dollar goes much further, than the federal government ever will. On a dollar-for-dollar basis, it's awfully hard to argue that the federal government would do more net good with $11 billion more of Bill Gates' money than he will himself, given his record.
Sen. Ron Wyden (D–Ore.), who has shown a higher-than-average literacy on matters of technology policy, unfortunately backed the plan and immediately allowed himself to be goaded by Musk, who polled Twitter on whether to realize some of his unrealized gains by selling 10 percent of his Tesla stock as a response to the proposal. "Whether or not the world's wealthiest man pays any taxes at all shouldn't depend on the results of a Twitter poll," Wyden sniffed. But that amount may well end up being determined by presidential popularity polls, which is hardly a perfect mechanism.
Every country on the planet with high real median personal income also has billionaires. It is at least plausible that there is a connection between institutions that make billionaires possible and the same ones that create general prosperity. In fact, Sweden has more billionaires per capita than the United States. Perhaps not coincidentally, Sweden is just one of dozens of countries that have tried wealth taxes and abandoned them.
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Because it is unconstitutional?
I mean, the policy is terrible, too, but we don't need to decide on that when you can't make the law that would implement it.
^This. Good God people, a federal wealth tax would be laughed out of court. Utterly unconstitutional on its face.
Consti-what?
I agree that it is unconstitutional, but we already have a federal wealth tax in place: the expatriation tax imposed by FATCA, which requires wealthy individuals to file income tax returns showing a "deemed sale" of all their assets as of the day before they leave the US.
Rumor has it that a lot of these expats know perfectly well that the tax is illegal, and that IRS routinely settles with them rather than allow the law to be tested in court, where they would expect to lose.
*they meaning the IRS.
Yes, the policy is terrible. But KMW calling it a wealth tax doesn’t make it so. It’s a tax on unrealized income. It’s not a novel concept. When public companies report their income they are reporting the sum of realized and unrealized income, and the two aren’t even broken out. Individuals have had to do it, and pay taxes on it, in the past (zero coupon bonds).
Public companies are publicly traded. As such, they're required to open their books so the whole world can get data on their sales, income, profit, holdings, etc to appropriately value the company when they buy a share. They do this entirely for the sake of being traded on the exchange, not a tax thing, and privately held companies without investors often keep their books and assets as close to the vest as possible.
Private citizens holdings are none of your goddamned business, subjecting them to disclosure like they are a public company is a ludicrous comparison.
Speaking of ludicrous, what does any of that have to do with whether it’s a wealth tax? Try to stay on the subject.
> When public companies report their income they are reporting the sum of realized and unrealized income, and the two aren’t even broken out.
Unrealized income isn't income until it is realized. Until then, it's just stuff that has gone up in value as to what others would pay for it.
"Billionaires are better at figuring out what to do with their money than the government will ever be."
Indeed.
Furthermore, billionaires are better at setting immigration policy. For example Reason.com's benefactor Charles Koch has been funding open borders advocacy since the days when KMW was working for Bill Kristol at The Weekly Standard.
#BillionairesKnowBest
#CheapLaborAboveAll
"Billionaires are better at figuring out what to do with their money than the government will ever be."
Agree, however when billionaires get together at Davos and start figuring what I can do with my money it's time to break out Madame Guillotine.
Perhaps not coincidentally, Sweden is just one of dozens of countries that have tried wealth taxes and abandoned them.
Why is it that governments in other countries can admit failure while this one cannot? If a wealth tax is tried it will fail. But will it go away? No. It won't. They'll just try harder and harder and harder.
Well, when they are lying by a factor of 10 in calling it a billionaires tax, it's undoubtedly going to be going lower and lower to achieve the goals.
Just drop the threshold another 10x to 10 million and it will rake in far more cash.
Democratic Gov Thugs, "Go STEAL by the force of Gov-Guns!"..
The sooner the left is acknowledge as criminal gang they are the better.
Counter-point: Why a wealth tax is a good (great) idea.
- Wealth is inherently bad, and we should both directly reduce wealth and disincentivize seeking wealth.
- Inequality is a social ill and moral failing. The most important thing a government can do is curate wealth to promote true equality.
- All the people working together through government know much better how to allocate and apply wealth than all the people working as individuals.
- Wealth skews too much towards people who seek financial rewards, instead of people who reject materialism.
- Any new tax is always a good idea. If it does not immediately produce desired results, we have decades to improve it.
The ability of some to accumulate wealth is a sign that your society is still somewhat free (and/or corrupt.)
Inequality is the natural result of differences in talent, effort, ability, and preference for risk-taking.
Profit is the difference between what people voluntarily pay for a good or service, and what it costs society in resources and effort to produce that good or service. The most profitable firms are the ones doing society the biggest service while consuming the least resources.
People who accumulate wealth have already demonstrated a proven talent for creating value.
All the people working together through government have already demonstrated a proven talent for burying us in 30 trillion dollars in debt and another 100 trillion dollars in unfunded liabilities.
Mistakes compound over time, and forcing wealth transfers from those who are good at creating value to those who are good at creating debt will destroy mountains of human potential.
I suspect you got trolled.
This is not a wealth tax so whatever the 'debate' here, it ain't about an actual wealth tax or about the tax base here in the US that tax revenues will be based on.
That said - one of the phantom arguments here is whether tracking assets is more difficult than tracking income. Which is clearly nonsense.
If you don't think tracking assets is harder than tracking income, you are dumber than I thought. Other than cash and stocks, there is no quick, easy system to accurately value assets. Unless you are going to send certified, independent appraisers out to value each chunk of wealth of rich people, you will never have a serious number. Assessed values on real estate aren't even in the realm in most places. How about art, jewelry, a big wine collection? There are way more ways to invest or hide wealth completely legally than there are easy, efficient ways to track it.
… you are dumber than I thought.
I feel certain that is so.
How do you think insurance companies value property? Is it all just some arbitrary mystery? And if it is, then why do courts use that as the valuation when stuff gets stolen?
They make estimates. An estimate is just that. They’re more difficult to determine than actual realized income. More importantly, their estimates are pretty good on average, and averages are all they care about. But sometimes their estimates are way off. Would you want your taxes to be based on a way-off outlier? BTW, when property is stolen, the valuation used is the estimate used in the policy. It’s not the actual valuation.
It is in the interest of the insured to report everything they want covered. When you are about to get fucked in the ass for what you report, numbers will absolutely be lower. The IRS valuing assets by what is reported is absolutely not going to generate real numbers.
Ok. So then whatever is the asset value registered for a court to deal with theft is exactly the same as the value registered for taxes.
How about Star Trek plates and Roger Clemens rookie cards
How about NFTs and crypto?
Seems the issues that the wealth tax is trying to solve could all be much easier to solve by just counting loans as a type of income and taxing them. If my understanding is correct, we allow people to write off loan repayment on their taxes currently, so the income used to repay loans isn't currently taxed.
I have no clue what you’re trying to accomplish here, but your understanding is abysmally incorrect. Loan repayments aren’t deductible. Interest expense is.
As a moral matter, if not a legal one, we might ask what the very rich do with their money as a way of evaluating whether they should keep it.
As a moral matter, we might ask what right we have to take something from someone else in the first place. Just because we outnumber him doesn't make it right.
As a legal matter, we might ask what right we have to take something from someone who has earned it legally and has already paid taxes on their income while earning it.
In neither case does it matter what he intends to spend it on.
Those "more valuable ends" can mostly be summarized as "gimme dat!"
"Billionaires are better at figuring out what to do with their money than the government will ever be."
Same is true of just about everyone.
Gimme. More.
An article about wealth tax in Switzerland. The example they use of someone in Geneva is a 48 basis points 0.48%
"Big money donors to the Republican Party do not want conservatism." - Rush Limbaugh answering a caller who asked why the GOP is always so quick to abandon conservatism.
This tells us that big money donors to the GOP are using their money to oppose the conservative agenda.
Meanwhile, big money donors to the democrat party are using their money to support the liberal agenda.
Both groups are working against me. Both groups are using their money to harm the country, in my opinion. Very well. Let them pay for it. Let the government take their money. Confiscate their wealth to pay for the leftist programs they favor.
I do not want them to be taxed excessively. I want them to achieve enlightenment. Failing that, take their money to pay for their agenda.
When the people shall have nothing more to eat, they will eat the rich.
Sadly; Some of the 'rich' got there by producing human goods/food.
So really; the only thing they're "eating" is themselves into poverty.
I miss the days when *earning* wealth came into the equation.