Robert Samuelson
Wednesday November 5, 2008
As the rich get poorer, everybody loses

WASHINGTON - For years, we've debated rising economic inequality. On one side, liberals denounce it as unjust. Redistribute wealth to the poor and middle class, they say.

On the other, conservatives minimize its importance. What matters most is overall economic growth, they retort.

Well, the conjunction of the presidential campaign and the financial crisis is giving the debate a curious twist. Liberals have triumphed politically; soaking the rich has become more acceptable.

But conservatives may have won the intellectual argument; making the rich poorer doesn't make everyone else richer.

If Barack Obama and John McCain agreed on anything, it was this: Greed is bad. They competed in denunciations of reckless investment bankers and avaricious CEOs.

Obama proposed raising taxes on higher incomes (couples above $250,000); though McCain didn't, he suggested that much recent wealth accumulation was ill-gotten.

Unintentionally, perhaps, he buttressed the moral case for more redistribution. Let's tap the gold mine of the rich.

Unfortunately, the mine has less gold. All the financial turmoil has left the wealthy - however defined - much less wealthy.

Stock ownership is highly concentrated. In 2001, the richest 1 percent owned 34 percent of stocks and mutual funds, estimates economist Edward N. Wolff of New York University.

Let's see. Since the market's high in October 2007, stocks are down (through Oct. 31) 38 percent, or $7.5 trillion, reports Wilshire Associates.

That will mean lower capital gains taxes, because capital gains - profits on the sale of stocks and other assets - will plunge.

In recent years, capital gains taxes have been running at $100 billion or more. That amount could drop sharply, even if the top rate on capital gains were raised from 15 percent to its pre-2003 level 20 percent. 

Thousands of well-paid investment bankers, traders, portfolio managers and security analysts are losing their jobs. Though Wall Street bonuses will continue, their total is likely to decrease.

Gains in executive compensation may be similarly squeezed. Profits are down; the political climate is hostile.

In 2005, the richest 1 percent of Americans had 18 percent of total income and paid 28 percent of all federal taxes, says the Congressional Budget Office. Their income won't grow much. Even if higher tax rates increase government revenues, the effect will be less than before.

Judged only by economic inequality, the financial crisis is a godsend.

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thudson (8:20pm 11-05-2008)
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And while I'm at it, the greed wasn't limited to CEOs and banks. The greed was you and me, we seem to forget that the stock market is a gamble, sometimes it goes up and sometimes down. But we won't let it go down, we demand that it ALWAYS goes up. Corporations profits go up every quarter, reguadless, or the CEO gets the axe. And then there's government. My wife worked in the mortgage industry in Maryland in the 1990s... the banks and lending institutions were being threatened with legal action if they did not write loans to folks that they knew could not meet the terms of the loan. And it was the government that was doing the threatening. Politicians were buying votes and creating another dependant class of citizens, dependant on them of course. Like my dad always said, there's no free lunch. Sooner or later you're going to have to pay the bill. Looks like its going to be sooner than later. Folks, the government is broke. There is no money.


thudson (8:09pm 11-05-2008)
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Like it or not, it is the rich which create prosperity. Its a well worn axiom but a poor man never gave me a job. Also, everyone looks at wealth (and by the way, we do not tax wealth, we tax income - think about it) as a zero sum game. Otherwise, there's only so much wealth to go around and the wealth you have means that someone else must have less. Not so, we create wealth, the more the better for all. I've lived in countries that tax and redistribute wealth and the result is that those who create wealth simple stop creating it because there's no point. Why should I work if the government is going to tax it away. Our founding father's were wiser than we give them credit. Take a look at the constitution, a man's income was NOT taxed. Government revenue was raised by excise taxes. Our founders understood the problem with taxing a man's labor.


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