Samantha Jacoby Profile picture
Nov 13, 2019 11 tweets 4 min read Read on X
More on our new paper: This graphic shows how a wealthy person can avoid income tax on a huge % of her income. cbpp.org/research/feder…
But there are solutions!

Starting w/ways to tax more types of income: policymakers should repeal stepped-up basis & tax capital gains of affluent households when assets are transferred to heirs. We can do this w/o affecting the middle-class (Obama’s budget did this, for one).
We should also shore up the estate tax, which has been severely weakened. Policymakers could reimpose the tax’s 2009 parameters ($3.5M/$7M exemption & 45% top rate) & close various estate tax loopholes.

Or, replace the estate tax w/an inheritance tax.
equitablegrowth.org/silver-spoon-t…
Policymakers could also impose a mark-to-market (MTM) system for wealthy households, which would impose tax annually on assets’ gain in value, whether or not they’ve been sold. Senator Ron Wyden recently released a white paper calling for such a system.
finance.senate.gov/imo/media/doc/…
As an alternative to MTM, policymakers could impose a wealth tax on wealthy households’ overall wealth holdings, w/o regard to actual gains & losses. Senator Warren’s 2 percent tax on households w/>$50M in net assets (3% for billionaires) falls in this bucket.
For ways to improve the taxation of income already taxed: raise the top rate (now 37%, far below the post-WWII ave. of 59%). And/or, enact a surtax on very high AGIs, which would help prevent wealthy filers from avoiding the top rate (b/c of deductions, capital gains, etc).
One of the simplest ways to ensure that the tax code doesn’t reward wealth over work would be raising rates on capital gains & dividends (currently 23.8%) to match or get closer to prevailing rates on wages & salaries.
Any progressive tax plan should repeal the 20% pass-through deduction added in the 2017 tax law.

The deduction mostly benefits high-income households & promotes tax avoidance by encouraging them to convert labor income into pass-through income.
cbpp.org/research/feder… Image
Policymakers should also raise the corporate tax rate, which the 2017 tax law slashed from 35% to 21%. Raising the rate to 28% or somewhat higher, plus broadening the corporate tax base, would reduce wealth inequality and raise revenue.
Any effort to boost progressive revenues should increase IRS funding for enforcement & operations support. The IRS plays an essential role in gov’t, collecting nearly all the revenue that funds important federal programs. Let it do its job.
cbpp.org/blog/high-cost…
These options don’t constitute a single agenda (some are complementary & others are alternatives), & they aren’t exhaustive. As w/all policies, they have advantages & tradeoffs. But the system isn’t working, and these policies all deserve good faith consideration.
#TaxFairness

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More from @jacsamoby

Jul 28, 2022
Adding a bit to @ChuckCBPP's thread, specifically on how the Inflation Reduction Act would narrow the longstanding carried interest loophole that lets private equity (and other investment fund) managers pay lower tax rates than their employees:
First, it's helpful to understand how private equity funds generally work. The fund is a partnership, which is a “pass-through” entity, so the fund’s profits are taxed in the hands of the owners as if the owners received the income directly.
The fund’s “general partner” is usually another partnership that is itself owned by the fund’s managers. The other owners, known as “limited partners,” are often institutional other passive investors who contribute capital to the fund.
Read 11 tweets
Jul 14, 2022
🧵setting the record straight about a proposal to close the loophole that lets some pass-through business owners avoid both a 3.8% Medicare payroll tax AND a parallel 3.8% tax on net investment income.
Closing the loophole would (1) limit inefficient gaming, (2) only affect a small share of high-income owners (and would thus be highly progressive) and (3) treat all pass-through business owners equally & improve economic efficiency.
Here’s the issue: high-income people who should be subject to either the 3.8% NIIT or Medicare tax can relatively easily rearrange their income & ownership form to avoid both 3.8% taxes. Lots of good examples here from @jeanmarionross and @SethHanlon: americanprogress.org/article/fact-s…
Read 16 tweets
Sep 28, 2020
Something any tax lawyer would tell you: many tax questions lack clear answers. In those fuzzy cases, taxpayers (aided by their tax advisors) have an incentive to place themselves on the tax-saving side of the line.
That’s tax avoidance. And often the only thing keeping high-income filers from taking more and more aggressive positions – eventually crossing the line into illegal tax evasion – is IRS enforcement (or the prospect of it).
But since 2010, policymakers have consistently slashed IRS enforcement funding, undermining the agency’s ability to perform its core function of enforcing the nation’s tax laws. With less enforcement funding, there’s far less auditing of the wealthy. ImageImage
Read 13 tweets
Aug 12, 2020
Important point from @crampell: in addition to leaving out struggling low- and middle-income families, a new capital gains tax cut would heap yet another tax break on investments that are already barely taxed washingtonpost.com/opinions/whate…
-Capital gains taxes are lower than top rates on wages (20% vs. 37%)
-Investors can avoid tax until they sell
-Other loopholes (like-kind exchanges, OZs, etc.) give tax breaks even if they sell
-Income tax is forgiven if they pass on assets to heirs
cbpp.org/blog/much-of-w…
Wealthy investors clearly don't need another tax break. Instead, policymakers should focus efforts on quickly getting $ into the hands of people who will spend it - lower-income families - to boost demand and provide relief.
Read 4 tweets
Aug 11, 2020
Thread: 30 million people are unemployed, 8-15 million kids aren't getting enough to eat & President Trump has - twice in 2 days - said he wants a capital gains tax cut. Regardless of the details, this would be a windfall for the wealthy. Here’s why 👇
It would do little or nothing to help “middle-income” people, let alone those who lost jobs or are struggling just to get by.
Capital gains cuts largely benefit wealthy investors: the top 1% got 75% of all long-term capital gains in 2019 & the top 20% got more than 90%, according to the Tax Policy Center.
Read 10 tweets
Aug 7, 2020
The Trump Administration is considering an executive order imposing a "payroll tax holiday.” The President has repeatedly called for a payroll tax cut in the upcoming stimulus package, but Senate Republicans rejected that for their proposal. 1/
bloomberg.com/news/articles/…
The two main payroll taxes amount to 15.3% of the first $137,700 of earnings, w/7.65% paid by employees (withheld from paychecks) & 7.65% paid by the employer. The CARES Act already deferred most employer-side payroll taxes through 2021. 2/
Experts say the President likely lacks authority to enact a payroll tax holiday: the President can defer taxes for up to a year during national disasters, but can’t forgive taxes or eliminate employers’ legal obligation to withhold tax from paychecks. 3/
Read 9 tweets

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