Posted on 03/26/2011 7:46:35 PM PDT by SeekAndFind
As Brad Williams walked the halls of the California state capitol in Sacramento on a recent afternoon, he spotted a small crowd of protesters battling state spending cuts. They wore shiny white buttons that said "We Love Jobs!" and argued that looming budget reductions will hurt the Golden State's working class.
Mr. Williams shook his head. "They're missing the real problem," he said.
The working class may be taking a beating from spending cuts used to close a cavernous deficit, Mr. Williams said, but the root of California's woes is its reliance on taxing the wealthy.
Nearly half of California's income taxes before the recession came from the top 1% of earners: households that took in more than $490,000 a year. High earners, it turns out, have especially volatile incomestheir earnings fell by more than twice as much as the rest of the population's during the recession. When they crashed, they took California's finances down with them.
Mr. Williams, a former economic forecaster for the state, spent more than a decade warning state leaders about California's over-dependence on the rich. "We created a revenue cliff," he said. "We built a large part of our government on the state's most unstable income group."
New York, New Jersey, Connecticut and Illinoisstates that are the most heavily reliant on the taxes of the wealthyare now among those with the biggest budget holes. A large population of rich residents was a blessing during the boom, showering states with billions in tax revenue. But it became a curse as their incomes collapsed with financial markets.
Arriving at a time of greatly increased public spending, this reversal highlights the dependence of the states on the outsize incomes of the wealthy. The result for state finances and budgets has been extreme volatility.
(Excerpt) Read more at online.wsj.com ...
The rich create jobs.
I have never seen a poverty stricken individual create a job for another person.
The richest 1% only pay 41% of all taxes?
Why aren’t they paying their ‘fair share”
they’re so evil
The reason why states like California are in trouble is simple... THEY DEPEND TOO MUCH ON THE ‘TAX THE RICH TO PAY FOR OUR SPENDING’ STRATEGY.
Almost half of California’s income taxes come from the top 1% of earners. In New York, the percentage is now 41%, up from 25% in 1994. In Connecticut and New Jersey, the top 1% pay more than 40%.
Being so dependent on super-rich people is great when times are good, because revenues soar. But the trouble is that the earnings of super-rich people are super-volatile, so when times are bad, or even mediocre, tax revenues plummet.
If governments approached budgeting the way smart people would, they would run massive surpluses in boom times, thus storing acorns for the inevitable winter ahead. But if our government officials have demonstrated anything over the years, it’s that they are utterly incapable of doing this. Instead, they look at the revenues in the boom times and think “WOW! We’re rich! We can spend every penny of that and more!”
And then the boom times end and deficits explode.
This phenomenon is especially acute in states in which huge portions of the total tax base are paid by super-rich people, because the incomes of super-rich people are wildly volatile.
In a boom year, for example, a successful Wall Street managing director might make $5 million. In a crappy year, he or she might make $1 million. Both of these incomes are otherworldly when compared to what normal folks make, so it’s no surprise that most people are in favor of socking it to the rich. But with said managing director paying a big slug of those incomes in taxes, the hit to the state’s budget is huge.
All of which is to say: There’s a downside to socking it to the rich.
Two words: G E
This is the most profound paragraph I have read in several weeks. Relying too heavily on rich people for taxes is a very risky business. Not a good business case at all!
This argument, to a conservative, trumps all the "fairness" arguments that typically dominate liberal--conservative debates on this topic.
I’m having a thought. There are way too few wealthy people, and they aren’t nearly well enough armed, that they can co-exist with a population that has been convinced that the rich have ruined their lives.
It makes no difference what the truth is. It makes no difference that everybody can be rich; that most rich work their butts off to get that way, that the rich are mostly paying all the taxes, are giving most of the charity, or are employing most of the people. The truth doesn’t matter.
What matters is the deception/perception. Convince the masses that the “rich” are screwing them, and you have revolution. Representative democracy was supposed to minimize that probability, but it doesn’t preclude it. In Wisconsin, it looks like a considerable part of the population is fine with senators running away, and think that passing laws is anarchy.
Bump
“New York, for instance, imposed a “millionaire’s tax” in 2009 on those earning $500,000 or more, although the tax is expected to expire at the end of 2011.”
Walruses will be living on BLT’s and Jagermeister before New York kills the “millionaire’s tax.”
BOOMTOWN... less taxes, less government..
It’s old adage but worth repeating... “We cannot tax ourselves into prosperity”...
” I contend that for a nation to try to tax itself into prosperity is like a man standing in a bucket and trying to lift himself up by the handle.”
— Winston Churchill
read in AM
The neanderthals are running us dry! and destroying our wealth....
Why not just tax GE?
Who IS John Galt?
After hearing about GE and their 0 tax ... what we typically think as rich seems more like middle class.
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