And yet somehow taxing them at a whopping whole 8% is still somehow seen as not only progress, but "radical" progress at that.
I feel bad or saying this, because I'm sure just that took a lot of doing, but wow is it pathetic when you look at the grand scheme of things.
And before anyone "it's better than nothing" 's me - it's the equivalent of nothing, those with the means will easily find ways around it, and even if they did pay the whole 8%, they'll still be a million times richer than not even the rest of us, but the wealthy half of the rest of us.
So yeah, pathetic.
Problem is, this kind of shit that is far far far from enough is enough to placate centrists and liberals who see it as a win and are happy to leave the system that enabled the vast inequality that this is so feebly trying to fix, in the first place, chug on uninterrupted.
This isn't even pocket money to those it is designed to impact, to think it would change their ways or the system in any way is absurd at best.
Absolutely. Liberals will see "new tax on billionaires" and break out the confetti, but it's literally "between the couch cushions" money to them. I don't know about them, but the money taken through my effective tax rate genuinely could impact my life for the better. At the very least, there's a chance radlibs will see through this one. I know something like this would have put me past the line back in the day.
The only one that's almost reasonable is the lowest tax bracket, which would be better at 4%. For the rest, I'd double it and add 2%. That's almost approaching something fair in the capitalist system
The US has worldwide taxation (so you can't just live somewhere else to avoid taxes) and an exit tax (so you can't just renounce your citizenship without paying up).
The exit tax would probably need to be increased to not make it an attractive choice, but it does already exist. I believe the current tax is basically "pay a 23.8% capital gains tax as if you sold everything".