By PAUL KRUGMAN
The New York Times
This week President Obama said the obvious: that wealthy Americans, many
of whom pay remarkably little in taxes, should bear part of the cost of
reducing the long-run budget deficit. And Republicans like Representative Paul
Ryan responded with shrieks of “class warfare.” It was, of course, nothing of
the sort. On the contrary, it’s people like Mr. Ryan, who want to exempt the
very rich from bearing any of the burden of making our finances sustainable, who
are waging class war.
As background, it helps to know what has been happening to incomes over
the past three decades. Detailed estimates from the Congressional Budget Office
— which only go up to 2005, but the basic picture surely hasn’t changed — show that
between 1979 and 2005 the inflation-adjusted income of families in the middle
of the income distribution rose 21 percent. That’s growth, but it’s slow,
especially compared with the 100 percent rise in median income over a
generation after World War II.
Meanwhile, over the same period, the income of the very rich, the top
100th of 1 percent of the income distribution, rose by 480 percent. No, that
isn’t a misprint. In 2005 dollars, the average annual income of that group rose
from $4.2 million to $24.3 million.
So do the wealthy look to you like the victims of class warfare?
To be fair, there is argument about the extent to which government
policy was responsible for the spectacular disparity in income growth. What we
know for sure, however, is that policy has consistently tilted to the advantage
of the wealthy as opposed to the middle class.
Some of the most important aspects of that tilt involved such things as
the sustained attack on organized labor and financial deregulation, which
created huge fortunes even as it paved the way for economic disaster. For
today, however, let’s focus just on taxes.
The budget office’s numbers show that the federal tax burden has fallen
for all income classes, which itself runs counter to the rhetoric you hear from
the usual suspects. But that burden has fallen much more, as a percentage of
income, for the wealthy. Partly this reflects big cuts in top income tax rates,
but, beyond that, there has been a major shift of taxation away from wealth and
toward work: tax rates on corporate profits, capital gains and dividends have
all fallen, while the payroll tax — the main tax paid by most workers — has
gone up.
And one consequence of the shift of taxation away from wealth and toward
work is the creation of many situations in which — just as Warren Buffett and
Mr. Obama say — people with multimillion-dollar incomes, who typically derive
much of that income from capital gains and other sources that face low taxes,
end up paying a lower overall tax rate than middle-class workers. And we’re not
talking about a few exceptional cases.
According to new estimates by the nonpartisan Tax Policy Center,
one-fourth of those with incomes of more than $1 million a year pay income and
payroll tax of 12.6 percent of their income or less, putting their tax burden
below that of many in the middle class.
Now, I know how the right will respond to these facts: with misleading
statistics and dubious moral claims.
On one side, we have the claim that the rising share of taxes paid by
the rich shows that their burden is rising, not falling. To point out the
obvious, the rich are paying more taxes because they’re much richer than they
used to be. When middle-class incomes barely grow while the incomes of the
wealthiest rise by a factor of six, how could the tax share of the rich not go
up, even if their tax rate is falling?
On the other side, we have the claim that the rich have the right to
keep their money — which misses the point that all of us live in and benefit
from being part of a larger society.
Elizabeth Warren, the financial reformer who is now running for the
United States Senate in Massachusetts, recently made some eloquent remarks to
this effect that are, rightly, getting a lot of attention. “There is nobody in
this country who got rich on his own. Nobody,” she declared, pointing out that
the rich can only get rich thanks to the “social contract” that provides a
decent, functioning society in which they can prosper.
Which brings us back to those cries of “class warfare.”
Republicans claim to be deeply worried by budget deficits. Indeed, Mr.
Ryan has called the deficit an “existential threat” to America . Yet
they are insisting that the wealthy — who presumably have as much of a stake as
everyone else in the nation’s future — should not be called upon to play any
role in warding off that existential threat.
Well, that amounts to a demand that a small number of very lucky people
be exempted from the social contract that applies to everyone else. And that,
in case you’re wondering, is what real class warfare looks like.
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