Portrait, Robert Reich, 08/16/09. (photo: Perian Flaherty)
race yourself. In coming weeks you'll hear there's no serious alternative to cutting Social Security and Medicare, raising taxes on middle class, and decimating what's left of the federal government's discretionary spending on everything from education and job training to highways and basic research.
"We" must make these sacrifices, it will be said, in
order to deal with our mushrooming budget deficit and cumulative debt.
But most of the people who are making this argument are very wealthy or
are sponsored by the very wealthy: Wall Street moguls like Pete Peterson
and his "Fix the Debt" brigade, the Business Roundtable, well-appointed
think tanks and policy centers along the Potomac, members of the
Simpson-Bowles commission.
These regressive sentiments are packaged in a
mythology that Americans have been living beyond our means: We've been
unwilling to pay for what we want government to do for us, and we are
now reaching the day of reckoning.
The truth is most Americans have not been living
beyond their means. The problem is their means haven't been keeping up
with the growth of the economy - which is why most of us need better
education, infrastructure, and healthcare, and stronger safety nets.
The real median wage is only slightly higher now than it was 30 years ago, even though the economy is twice as large.
The only people whose means have soared are at the
very top, because they've received almost all the gains from growth.
Over the last three decades, the top 1 percent's share of the nation's
income has doubled; the top one-tenth of 1 percent's share, tripled. The
richest one-tenth of 1 percent is now earning as much as the bottom 120
million Americans put together.
Wealth has become even more concentrated than income (income is a stream of money, wealth is the pool into which it flows).
The richest 1 percent now own more
than 35 percent of all of the nation's household wealth, and 38 percent
of the nation's financial assets – including stocks and pension funds.
Think about this: The richest 400 Americans have more wealth
than the bottom 150 million of us put together. The 6 Walmart heirs
have more wealth than bottom 33 million American families combined.
So why are we even contemplating cutting programs the middle class and poor depend on, and raising their taxes?
We should tax the vast accumulations of wealth now in the hands of a relative few.
To the extent they have any wealth at all, most
Americans have it in their homes – whose prices have stopped falling in
most of the country but are still down almost 30 percent from their 2006
peak.
Yet homes are subject to the only major tax on wealth - property taxes.
Yale Professor Bruce Ackerman and Anne Alstott have
proposed a 2 percent surtax on the wealth of the richest one-half of 1
percent of Americans owning more than $7.2 million of assets.
They figure it would generate $70 billion a year, or
$750 billion over the decade. That's more than the fiscal cliff deal
raises from high-income Americans.
Together, the two sets of taxes on the wealthy - tax
increases contained in the fiscal cliff agreement, and a wealth tax such
as Ackerman and Alstott have proposed - would just about equal the
spending cuts the White House has already agreed to, totaling $1.5 trillion (or $1.7 trillion including interest savings).
That seems about right.
Robert B. Reich, Chancellor's Professor of Public
Policy at the University of California at Berkeley, was Secretary of
Labor in the Clinton administration. Time Magazine named him one of the
ten most effective cabinet secretaries of the last century. He has
written thirteen books, including the best sellers "Aftershock" and "The
Work of Nations." His latest is an e-book, "Beyond Outrage." He is also a founding editor of the American Prospect magazine and chairman of Common Cause.
2 comments:
So $750,000,000,000 (750 billion) raised over 10 years is supposed to do what to the over $10,000,000,000,000 (10 trillion) in deficits we are heading toward during that same decade?
And let's not forget that $16,000,000,000,000 (16 trillion) we are in the hole as I write this.
Questions Chancellor Professor;
When will this reach a point when we can't borrow enough to pay our bills?
And when that point is reached, who will suffer most?
Reich speaks of wealth as if it were a gift from heaven rather than hard earned and deserved. Sam Walton built his empire over many years and when he passed his fortune was shared by his family. What right or claim do any of us have to his hard work and legacy? We should also remember that all this wealth was already taxed as income, dividends, interest or inheritance under the law. I for one do not believe in stealing other peoples wealth to benefit the masses. We used to call the concept Communist!
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