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Confusing Wealth and Income
CATO Institute ^ | August 27, 2008 | Richard W. Rahn

Posted on 09/04/2008 9:49:53 AM PDT by Always Right

Which of the following families is "richer"? The first family consists of a wife who has recently become a medical doctor, and she makes $160,000 per year. Her husband is a small business entrepreneur who makes $110,000 per year, giving them a total family income of $270,000 per year. However, they are still paying off the loans the wife took out for medical school and the loans the husband took out to start his business, amounting to debts of $300,000. Their total assets are valued at $450,000; hence, their real net worth or wealth (the difference between gross assets and liabilities) is only $150,000.

The second family consists of a trial lawyer who took early retirement and his non-working wife. They have an annual income of $230,000, all of it derived from interest on tax-free municipal bonds they own. However, their net worth is $7 million, consisting of $5 million in bonds, a million-dollar home with no mortgage, and a million dollars in art work, home furnishings, automobiles and personal items.

The second family is clearly far better off financially than the first family, yet many in the U.S. Congress, including Sen. Barack Obama, want to increase taxes on the first (and poorer) family and not on the wealthier family. They have mis-defined "rich" by confusing a flow (income) with a stock (real net assets), and thus come to the wrong conclusion. They want to tax those (who make more than $250,000 a year) who are trying to become rich, while preserving the status for those who already have wealth.

Increasing taxes on those 2.3 million American households who earn more than $250,000 per year is foolish and destructive for several reasons. It reduces the incentives for highly productive people to spend years in school obtaining needed skills, and then work hard in producing goods and services desired by their fellow citizens. It encourages the misallocation of productive resources by encouraging people to find ways to minimize the tax burden rather than to use their labor and savings for the highest and best use. It reduces the mobility of families up and down the income scale, and freezes the advantages of those who have substantial inherited wealth (e.g., the Kennedys, Kerrys, Pelosis, etc.).

Those who want the "rich" to pay more or "give back" not only confuse income with wealth, but also fail to understand life cycle mobility, and the effects of taxation and income redistribution programs on "disposable income." Many people, when they are young (including the average graduate student), would be classified as poor in terms of taxable income. Most people have a sharp rise in family or "household" income after they graduate from school, and many of these enter the definition of "upper income" in their forties and fifties, but after they retire, their taxable income often drops to the point where they are considered middle income, even though they may have more than a million dollars in net assets. Income distribution is most often defined by "household" income as contrasted with individual income. Most low-income "households" consist of single (often young) individuals, while most families with more than one income earner are higher income "households." The fact is there are about 4 times (8.9 million) as many households that have net assets of a million or more than there are households that earn more than $250,000. And many of the high-income households do not have a million dollars in net assets.

Many politicians and media people confuse taxable income with disposable and in-kind income. Because of the highly progressive income tax system, (97 percent of income taxes are paid by the top 50 percent of income earners and the top 1 percent pays 40 percent of the tax, despite having only 20 percent of the income), the difference in high-income and low-income families in after-tax income is far less than pre-tax income. In addition, there are many government welfare and subsidy programs for low-income people that are not included in many of the standard definitions of income.

Given that high marginal tax rates on income are counterproductive, some have argued for a wealth tax, but that doesn't work either. A wealth tax mainly taxes productive capital, thus reducing job and productivity growth, and it also encourages people to move their wealth to other countries and/or engage in extravagant expenditures - as the French have found out, much to their regret.

Mr. Obama also says that he wants to increase the capital gains tax. Many people have times in their lives when they reap a substantial capital gain from the sale of a farm or small business or a vacation home, etc. If they receive a couple of hundred thousand dollars or more from the capital gain, they appear to be "rich" in that year, according to Mr. Obama's definition, even though they may have an average yearly income of less than $100,000 and net assets of less than a half-million dollars. They will not only be taxed at a higher rate, but if the asset has been held for many years and has grown in value no faster than inflation, they will be taxed on imaginary income, and may well suffer a real loss - which is not only economically destructive but immoral.

Those who confuse taxable income with wealth are guilty of both sloppy use of language and sloppy thinking. Is it prudent to trust the writing of the tax code to a group of sloppy thinkers?


TOPICS: Business/Economy; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: economicpolicy; income; obama; tax; taxes; wealth
This was a topic I wanted to address and after a bit of research saw that CATO already has. The points that need to be made are:

1. An Income Tax is not a Tax on Wealth or the Wealthy.
2. Obama's high tax rate on high income is actually a Wealth Prevention tax! It prevents poor people from becoming wealthy.

What Obama's tax does is destroy the American dream by making it impossible for people who are not already wealthy to become wealthy. What kind of hope is that???

1 posted on 09/04/2008 9:51:12 AM PDT by Always Right
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To: Always Right
Sowell discusses this in considerable detail:


2 posted on 09/04/2008 9:57:29 AM PDT by facedown (Armed in the Heartland)
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To: Always Right
some have argued for a wealth tax, but that doesn't work either.

Usually, wealth has already been taxed during its accumulation. To tax it again on a yearly basis is absurd.

3 posted on 09/04/2008 10:01:06 AM PDT by Go Gordon
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To: Always Right

Properly defined, an income tax is a tax on the acquisition of wealth.

Since the “rich” are already wealthy, they may not have appreciable taxable income, and thus may not in fact pay any significant tax. Secondly, the wealthy can afford to use tax-free instruments like tax-free municipal bonds and so forth, such that they do not have any taxable income, or that that taxable income may be small when considered in the context of their entire income.

Also, those who may earn $250K may not earn that for many years such as a practicing professional attorney or even MD. The entrepreneur, may make that in a single year and make less in the years preceding and following such an event.

This is what the royalists in Europe have done to prevent the rabble (aka newly rich) from invading their enclaves like Monte Carlo and keeping them as surfs and peasants and taxpayers.

If one were able to keep the fruits of one’s labors, one might not have to work until 67 years old. You could make good living and in 20 to 30 years leave the labor market for a comfortable life. I know the money that has been stolen from me in taxes would if properly invested like the other monies I have managed to save, would allow me to leave the workforce next year after 30 years. As it stands now, I will have to work until the day I die (family history suggests that my demise will be at age 67).


4 posted on 09/04/2008 10:08:44 AM PDT by Ouderkirk (I will not vote for Obama not because he is black, but because he is RED)
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To: Always Right
The second family is clearly far better off financially than the first family, yet many in the U.S. Congress, including Sen. Barack Obama, want to increase taxes on the first (and poorer) family and not on the wealthier family.

Not to worry. Obama's policies (which I detest -- don't get the wrong impression) are more evenhanded than this would indicate. He taxes heavily and directly the income of the first family. His policies will also bring about inflation and dollar debasement, which will tax the much larger principal of the second family. Everybody takes it in he shorts. The second family just doesn't get to write a check--their nest egg is nibbled away just the same.

5 posted on 09/04/2008 10:39:44 AM PDT by Pearls Before Swine (Is /sarc really necessary?)
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To: Always Right

“They want to tax those (who make more than $250,000 a year) who are trying to become rich, while preserving the status for those who already have wealth.”

Heh, I find that revelation amusing. People think that by increasing taxes on the “rich” are heling them, yet they’re helping the people they hate. Wonder how long it’ll take that to sink in?


6 posted on 09/05/2008 6:29:22 AM PDT by RWB Patriot
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To: RWB Patriot

This is classic fascism.

The entrenched “already got theirs” businesses, wealthy class, etc,

using the government to keep out the “competition”.


7 posted on 09/05/2008 6:35:00 AM PDT by MrB (You can't reason people out of a position that they didn't use reason to get into in the first place)
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To: MrB

And just like the Germans, Americans are falling for it hook, line and sinker.


8 posted on 09/05/2008 11:16:27 AM PDT by RWB Patriot
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To: Always Right

What he should be taxing is consumption, but that would be “fair” and therefore note result int he outcome that Obama and his liberal brethren want.


9 posted on 09/05/2008 11:30:41 AM PDT by tcostell (MOLON LABE - http://freenj.blogspot.com - RadioFree NJ)
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