Proffitt: Taxes benefit the super-rich
Thursday, August 25th, 2011I had been planning to write a column using that article for my take-off point and stressing the fact that Buffett specifically rejects claims by Republican leaders in the House of Representatives, who are pledged not to raise taxes on the very wealthiest among us by even an itsy-bitsy amount because it would harm our economy by reducing the incentive for the rich to invest in enterprises which would create jobs.
On Wednesday the Herald-Tribune carried an editorial discussing the Buffett article. It was an excellent editorial, and made many of the same points I wanted to make, but it created a problem for me. Should I go ahead and write on the same subject?
I decided yes for two reasons: It is in the national interest for Buffetts article to get as much exposure as possible, and there is a suggestion I want to float that I have not seen anywhere else.
Investors undeterred
First, a brief quote from Buffett: I have worked with investors for 60 years and I have yet to see anyone not even when capital gains rates were 39.9 percent in 1976-77 shy away from a sensible investment because of the tax rate on the potential gain. People invest to make money, and potential taxes have never scared them off.
Amen.
And, now the important message: I personally do not know any super-rich people, but I am sure some of my readers do, and I want them to urge the super-rich lets say anybody with an annual income of more than a million dollars to act in accord with their own self-interest and support modest tax increases for themselves and their peers.
More than a few of you may think such a proposition is little short of sacreligious. But, actually it makes very good sense. The United States in the last two decades has evolved into a country with the largest gap in the world between average citizens and the top few percent of the population.
This is not a healthy situation. If we have a long number of years with high unemployment and spreading poverty and many families losing their homes, voters in the low- and middle-income brackets are going to be very anxious for the federal government to do something, and that something will require a lot of money.
We live, thank God, in a democracy. Citizens elect presidents and members of Congress who pass laws and levy taxes and will decide where to find that money. The first place to look will be at a higher and very top-heavy income tax.
We could be in the early years of such a period, if not now, then surely one of these years. And whenever it happens, the wealthy among us will be in a much better position if they can rightly claim they have been doing their fair share all along.
Willing to pay
Indeed, flipping through the Internet responses to Buffetts column, I was pleasantly surprised to find a significant number of comments from people who said they are very rich. To quote from one collection of responses:
Other (hedge fund managers) quickly concede that they should pay additional taxes. Carried interest is a joke, stresses one prominent hedgie, referring to the low rate at which earnings at hedge funds and private equity funds are taxed. Its a loophole. He is all for raising the rate on carried interest and paying more in personal taxes.
… Omega Advisors founder Leon Cooperman has gone on record supporting a 10 percent surtax for three years on individuals earning more than $500,000 per year.
Perhaps investment holdings should be taxed after ten years, regardless of whether theyre sold, says one hedge fund manager.
… A prominent long-short manager says he would welcome paying more in taxes provided it was part of a comprehensive package of changes that included cutting defense spending, raising the retirement age for Social Security and changing immigration policy. He adds, I have no problem paying more if it is not going down a rat hole.
I think there are a lot of very wealthy people who are very smart perhaps enough to elect senators and representatives who would vote to raise their taxes for their own good. Certainly their candidates would have no trouble raising campaign funds.
Waldo Proffitt is the former editor of the Herald-Tribune.
