This is not an endorsement of the article. Personally I favor some  kind
of system where there is a top income tax rate of 25% except in times
of declared national emergency. But no deductions for anything,
meaning anything at all. And no capital gains, either, nothing.
But the top rate would be 25 %.
 
Still, the article makes some worthwhile points.
 
Billy
 
 
=====================================================
 
 
Forbes
 
 
_Joel  Kotkin_ (http://blogs.forbes.com/joelkotkin/) , Contributor  

12/04/2012 @ 5:40PM |16,542 views  
The Blue-State Suicide Pact
 
 

With their enthusiastic backing of President Obama and the Democratic Party 
 on Election Day, the bluest parts of America may have embraced a program 
utterly  at odds with their economic self-interest. The almost uniform 
support of blue  states’ congressional representatives for the administration’s 
campaign for tax  “fairness” represents a kind of bizarre economic suicide 
pact. 
Any move to raise taxes on the rich — defined as households making over  
$250,000 annually — strikes directly at the economies of these states, which  
depend heavily on the earnings of high-income professionals, entrepreneurs 
and  technical workers. In fact, when you examine which states, and 
metropolitan  areas, have the highest concentrations of such people, it turns 
out 
they are  overwhelmingly located in the bluest states and regions. 
Ironically the new taxes will have relatively little effect on the detested 
 Romney uber-class, who derive most of their income from capital gains, 
taxed at  a much lower rate. They also have access to all manner of offshore 
dodges. Nor  will it have much impact on Silicon Valley millionaires and 
billionaires, or the  Hollywood moguls and urban land speculators who 
constitute 
the Democratic  Party’s “good rich,” and enjoy many of the same privileges 
as their wealthy  conservative counterparts. 
The people whose wallets will be drained in the new war on “the rich” are  
high-earning, but hardly plutocratic professionals like engineers, doctors, 
 lawyers, small business owners and the like. Once seen as the bastion of 
the  middle class, and exemplars of upward mobility, these people are 
emerging as the  modern day “_kulaks_ 
(http://www.historyplace.com/worldhistory/genocide/stalin.htm) ,”  the affluent 
peasants ruthlessly targeted by Stalin in 
the early 1930s. 
The ironic geography of the Democratic drive can be seen most clearly by  
examining the distribution of the classes now targeted by the coming purge. 
The  _top 10 states_ (http://www.bestplaces.net/)  with the largest  
percentage of “rich” households under the Obama formula include true blue  
bastions 
_Washington_ (http://www.forbes.com/places/dc/washington/) ,  D.C., which 
has the highest concentration of big earners, Connecticut, New  Jersey, 
Maryland, Massachusetts, _New York_ (http://www.forbes.com/places/ny/new-york/) 
, 
California and  Hawaii. The only historic “swing state” in the top six is 
Virginia, due largely  to the presence of the affluent suburbs of the 
capital. These same states,  according to _the  Tax Foundation_ 
(http://taxfoundation.org/blog/monday-map-average-tax-savings-one-year-extension-bush-tax-cuts)
 , would benefit the most from an extension of the  much-lambasted Bush tax 
cuts. 
The pattern of distribution of “the rich” is even more marked when we 
focus  on metropolitan areas. Big metro areas supported Obama, particularly 
their core  cities, by margins as high as four to one. Besides New York, the 
metro areas  with the highest percentage of high-earning households include 
such lockstep  blue cities as _San  Francisco_ 
(http://www.forbes.com/places/ca/san-francisco/) , Washington, _San Jose_ 
(http://www.forbes.com/places/ca/san-jose/) , _Atlanta_ 
(http://www.forbes.com/places/ga/atlanta/)  and Los 
Angeles. 
The income tax hit may not be the only pain inflicted on these areas in the 
 President’s drive for greater “fairness.” Moves to curb mortgage interest 
 deductions for affluent households also would fall predominately on these 
same  areas. The states with the highest listing prices — and the biggest 
mortgages on  average – are the president’s home state of Hawaii, followed by 
the District of  Columbia, New York, California and Connecticut. According 
to the Census Bureau  and the Federal Housing Agency, median home values in 
_California_ 
(http://www.doctorhousingbubble.com/middle-class-california-dream-what-is-middle-class-for-california-incomes-real-estate-prices-migration/)
   are 200% higher than the national median, and in New York they’re 150% 
higher;  in contrast, red Texas’ prices are below the median. 
The contrast in prices is even greater between metropolitan areas. The  
highest prices — and thus largest mortgages — are in the _deep blue havens_ 
(http://cgi.money.cnn.com/tools/homepricedata/)  of San  Francisco, New York 
and Los Angeles. If the mortgage interest deduction is  capped for loans, 
say, over $300,000, homeowners in these cities will suffer far  more than in 
key red state cities like Dallas or Houston, where homes are at  least half 
the price. 
The curbing of the mortgage interest deduction constitutes only one part of 
a  broader effort to cut back on all itemized deductions. This would hit 
states  with the _highest  rates of people taking such deductions_ 
(http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424127887323353204578128993929594584.html)
 : 
California, New York, the District  of Columbia, Connecticut and New Jersey, 
according to the Wall Street Journal.  In contrast, the states least vulnerable 
to this kind of leveling reform would  be either red states such as 
Indiana, Alaska or Kentucky, or classic “swing”  states such as Iowa and Ohio. 
Of course, one can argue that these changes follow the precepts of social  
justice: Rich people and rich regions should pay more. Yet being “rich” 
means  different things in different places, due to vast differences in costs 
of  living. The cost of living in New York and Los Angeles, for example, is 
so high  that the adjusted value of salaries _rank  in the bottom fifth in 
the nation_ 
(http://www.forbes.com/sites/joelkotkin/2012/07/09/the-cities-where-a-paycheck-stretches-the-farthest/)
 . In other words, a couple with two  
children with a $150,000 income in Austin or Raleigh may be, in terms of 
housing  and personal consumption, far “richer” than one making twice that in 
New York or  Los Angeles. (See “_The  Cities Where A Paycheck Stretches The 
Furthest_ 
(http://www.forbes.com/sites/joelkotkin/2012/07/09/the-cities-where-a-paycheck-stretches-the-farthest/)
 “) 
What would a big tax increase on the “rich” mean to the poor and working  
classes in these areas? To be sure, they may gain via taxpayer-funded 
transfer  payments, but it’s doubtful that higher taxes will make their 
prospects 
for  escaping poverty much brighter. For the most part, the economies of the 
key blue  regions are very dependent on the earnings of the mass affluent 
class, and their  spending is critical to overall growth. Singling out the 
affluent may also  reduce the discretionary spending that drives employment in 
the personal  services sector, retail and in such key fields as 
construction. 
This prospect is troubling since many of these areas are already among the  
most unequal in America. In the expensive blue areas, the lower-income 
middle  class population that would benefit from the Administration’s plan of 
keeping  the Bush rates for them is proportionally smaller, although the 
numbers of the  poor, who already pay little or nothing in income taxes, 
generally greater.  Indeed, according to a _recent  Census analysis_ 
(https://www.census.gov/hhes/povmeas/methodology/supplemental/research/Short_ResearchSPM2011
.pdf) , the two places with the highest proportions of poor people  are 
Washington, D.C., and California. By far the highest level of inequality  among 
the country’s 25 most populous counties is in Manhattan. 
Finally we have to consider the impact of the new tax rates on the fiscal  
health of these states. Four of the five states in the poorest shape 
fiscally,  according to a _recent  survey_ 
(http://finance.yahoo.com/news/the-best-and-worst-run-states-in-america-150415625.html)
  by 24/7 Wall Street, all 
have congressional delegations dominated by  Democrats — California, New 
Jersey, Rhode Island and Illinois (the one red state  is Arizona). Slower 
economic growth brought about by higher taxes — compounded  by high state taxes 
— 
is unlikely to make their situation any better. 
So what can we expect to happen if the fiscal cliff appears, or if the  
President and his party get their taxes on the rich? One can expect a  
proportionally greater impact on citizens and the budgets of the already  
expensive, 
high-tax states, where the new kulak class is concentrated. It may  also 
spark a greater migration of people and companies to less expensive,  
lower-tax areas. 
Perhaps the greatest irony in all this is that the Republicans, largely  
detested in the deep blue bastions, are the ones most likely to fall on their  
swords to maintain lower rates for the the mass affluent class in the 
bluest  states and metros. If they were something other than the stupid party, 
or 
 perhaps a bit more cynical, they would respond to the President’s tax 
proposals  by taking a line from their doddering cultural icon, Clint Eastwood: 
make my  day.

-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

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