It's commonly argued that you can't do very much just by raising taxes on
the very rich.

NYT says it ain't so. You could do a lot.

http://www.nytimes.com/2015/10/17/business/putting-numbers-to-a-tax-increase-for-the-rich.html

[...]
But what could a tax-the-rich plan actually achieve? As it turns out, quite
a lot, experts say. Given the gains that have flowed to those at the tip of
the income pyramid in recent decades, several economists have been making
the case that the government could raise large amounts of revenue
exclusively from this small group, while still allowing them to take home a
majority of their income.

It is “absurd” to argue that most wealth at the top is already highly taxed
or that there isn’t much more revenue to be had by raising taxes on the 1
percent, says the economist Joseph E. Stiglitz, winner of the Nobel in
economic science, who has written extensively about inequality. “The only
upside of the concentration of the wealth at the top is that they have more
money to pay in taxes,” he said.
[...]
According to that measure — used by the Tax Policy Center, a joint project
of the Urban Institute and the Brookings Institution — the top 1 percent
includes about 1.13 million households earning an average income of $2.1
million.

Raising their total tax burden to, say, 40 percent would generate about
$157 billion in revenue the first year. Increasing it to 45 percent brings
in a whopping $276 billion. Even taking account of state and local taxes,
the average household in this group would still take home at least $1
million a year.

If the tax increase were limited to just the 115,000 households in the top
0.1 percent, with an average income of $9.4 million, a 40 percent tax rate
would produce $55 billion in extra revenue in its first year.

That would more than cover, for example, the estimated $47 billion cost of
eliminating undergraduate tuition at all the country’s four-year public
colleges and universities, as Senator Bernie Sanders has proposed, or Mrs.
Clinton’s cheaper plan for a debt-free college degree, with money left over
to help fund universal prekindergarten.
[...]

===

Robert Naiman
Policy Director
Just Foreign Policy
www.justforeignpolicy.org
[email protected]
(202) 448-2898 x1
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