On Tuesday, Senator Bernie Sanders proposed his own wealth tax on millionaires and billionaires, and its objectives highlight the sometimes hard-to-see contrast between Sanders’ and Senator Elizabeth Warren’s approaches to redressing wealth inequality.
Sanders’ new wealth tax would target a larger number of upper class households than Warren’s existing plan, and at higher rates. His proposal would impose a 1% tax on net worths over $32 million (and single filers with net worths more than $16 million), affecting 180,000 households. The plan has several brackets, with a 2% tax over $50 million, 3% over $250 million, 4% over $500 million, 5% over $1 billion, all the way up to 8% on net worths over $10 billion.
Warren has billed her approach as a “two-cent tax” on every dollar of net worth above $50 million (plus a three percent tax on every dollar of net worth above $1 billion), which University of California-Berkeley economists estimate will raise $2.6 trillion in revenue over a decade, from approximately 75,000 wealthy households.
Citing the same Berkeley economists as the Warren campaign, Emmanuel Saez and Gabriel Zucman, Sanders’ wealth tax would raise far more than Warren’s: $4.35 trillion over 10 years.
While both proposals target sprawling wealth inequality, Warren’s tax is pitched as a minimum effective dose for generating revenue to be spent on rebuilding the middle class, while the Sanders proposal aims to rein in the billionaire class by cutting in half the wealth held by the typical billionaire over 15 years.
“I don’t think that billionaires should exist,” Sanders told the New York Times. “I hope the day comes when they don’t.”
Saez and Zucman tested the taxes retrospectively, analyzing how the richest people in the United States would be affected. In the case of Amazon founder Jeff Bezos, if Warren’s wealth tax had been in effect since 1982, Bezos would now be worth $87 billion instead of $160 billion. If Sanders’ tax had existed, Bezos would be worth $43 billion. Zucman posted the comparative data for other billionaires on Twitter.
- Bill Gates, worth $97 billion, would have $36 billion under Warren’s plan, less than $10 billion under Sanders’.
- Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg, worth $61 billion, would instead have $44 billion under Warren’s plan, $29 billion under Sanders’.
- Charles Koch, and his late brother David, would each have had their $53.5 billion reduced to $19 billion under Warren’s plan and $8 billion under Sanders’.
- The three richest Walton Walmart heirs would go from $45 billion to $15 billion under Warren’s wealth tax and $5 billion under Sanders’.
Rather than reining in billionaires, Warren has placed her emphasis on how a small, targeted tax can produce substantial benefits.
“Universal pre-k for every three year old and four year old in this country — two cents! Raise the wages of every child-care worker and preschool teacher in this country — two cents! We can do all of that, and we can make technical school, community college, and four-year college free for everyone who wants an education — two cents!” Warren said in a September speech in New Hampshire.Like Warren, Sanders would use the resulting revenue windfall on progressive priorities, including his recently announced housing plan, which proposes to establish national rent control, build 7.4 million affordable housing units and end homelessness. Other Sanders policies, including a soon-to-be-announced plan for universal child care and his signature issue, “Medicare for All,” would also use money generated by the proposed tax on wealth.
Sanders has previously pitched wealth taxes, including in the run-up to his 2016 Democratic primary campaign, but prior proposals have typically centered around expanding the estate tax on inheritance. Still, a direct tax on net worth isn’t without precedent—both proposed wealth taxes have been compared to the property tax that acts much the same way for middle-income households.
While both Sanders and Warren would use the resulting tax revenue to fund their progressive priorities, the Sanders wealth tax is also designed to cut back the wealth growth of billionaires to the same rate as the average American household.
For Warren, a wealth tax is primarily a path to revenue, while Sanders emphasizes reducing the economic power of billionaires as a class.
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