Bloomberg Businessweek - USA (2019-11-11)

(Antfer) #1

F I N A N C E


3


26


Edited by
Pat Regnier

Democratsarerethinking
how the IRS treats financial assets

Democrats these days are throwing around plans
for new and unprecedented taxes on wealth, finan-
cial transactions, capital gains, and inheritances.
Tantalizing them are the trillions of dollars of
wealth in the hands of the richest 0.1%, much of it
escaping taxation.
Republicans passed their own tax-reform
bill less than a year after President Trump took
office, giving substantial breaks to the rich. While
a Democratic version in 2021 would require tak-
ing back both the White House and U.S. Senate,
almost every Democratic presidential candidate

says higher taxes on the wealthy are a priority.
Squeeze the billionaires, their thinking goes, and
the next president can not only fund progressive
priorities but also start to reverse a decades-long
trend of widening inequality. That’s far easier to
put into a tweet than into the tax code—merely hik-
ing income tax rates might not bring in much rev-
enue, especially from the top 0.1%. To really get
more from the rich, creativity will be required.
In white papers, books, and conference rooms,
progressive tax experts are questioning basic
assumptions about how the tax system works.

Bloomberg Businessweek November 11, 2019

ILLUSTRATION: MAXIME MOUYSSET. WYDEN: COURTESY U.S. SENATE. DATA: COMPILED BY BLOOOMBERG

Taxing the


Wealth That’s


Out of Reach

Free download pdf