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The rest of us ought to be having a serious discussion about a wealth
tax. Because if you really want to know what’s happening to the
American economy you need to look at household wealth — not just
incomes.
The Fed just
reported that household wealth increased from October through December. That’s the first gain in three quarters.
Good news? Take closer look. The entire gain came from increases in
stock prices. Those increases in stock values more than made up for
continued losses in home values.
But the vast majority of Americans don’t have their wealth in the
stock market. Over 90 percent of the nation’s financial assets –
including stocks and pension-fund holdings – are owned by the richest 10
percent of Americans. The top 1 percent owns 38 percent.
Most Americans have their wealth in their homes – whose prices
continue to drop. Housing prices are down by a third from their 2006
peak.
So as the value of financial assets held by American households
increased by $1.46 trillion in the fourth quarter, the wealthiest 10
percent of Americans became $1.3 trillion richer, and the wealthiest 1
percent became $554.8 billion richer.
But at the same time, as the value of household real estate fell by
$367.4 billion in the fourth quarter, homeowners – mostly middle class –
lost over $141 billion (owners’ equity is 38.4 percent of total
household real estate).
Presto. America’s wealth gap – already wider than the nation’s income
gap – has become even wider. The 400 richest Americans have more wealth
than the bottom 150 million Americans put together.
Given this unprecedented concentration of wealth – and considering
what the nation needs to do to rebuild our schools and infrastructure
while at the same time saving Medicare and reducing the long-term budget
deficit – shouldn’t we be aiming higher than a “Buffet tax” on the
incomes of millionaires?
There should also be a surtax on the super rich.
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
half the savings Congress’s now defunct Supercommittee was aiming for.
Instead of standing empty-handed while Santorum and Romney dominate
the airwaves with their regressive Social Darwinism, Democrats need to
be reminding Americans of what’s happening in the real economy – and
what needs to happen.
The wealth gap is widening into a chasm. A surtax on the super rich is fair — and it’s necessary.
Robert Reich is Chancellor's Professor of Public Policy at the University of California at Berkeley. He writes a blog at www.robertreich.org. His most recent book is Aftershock.
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