(C) Common Dreams
This story was originally published by Common Dreams and is unaltered.
. . . . . . . . . .



Could 2025 End Up a Nightmare for Our Tax-Averse Rich? [1]

['Sam Pizzigati']

Date: 2024-09

How do our super rich pull that trick off? Chuck Marr and Samantha Jacoby from the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities walk us through the magic in a rundown they released earlier this month. The wealthiest among us, they detail, don’t sell their appreciated assets. They borrow against them.

This borrowing lets the rich maintain their luxurious lifestyles and avoid having to pay the — modest — tax they would have to pay if they went and sold their assets that have soared in value. Their assets, meanwhile, continue to increase in value, and that increase will typically far exceed whatever costs the borrowing against these assets might have engendered.

What happens when these rich pass on to the great beyond? Their capital gains remain untaxed. The particular magic here goes by the label of “stepped-up basis.” The heirs to the wealth our dear-departed wealthiest leave behind face no tax on the billions in unrealized capital gains their rich benefactors had accumulated over the years. The reason: Our tax code values inherited assets at their fair market value at the moment of inheritance. Any capital gains over the assets’ original cost simply — for tax purposes — disappear.

How’s that for magic!

This bag of tax tricks doesn’t work at all for the one major appreciating asset that average Americans hold: our homes. We pay every year property taxes on the homes we own. If the value of our homes rises, we pay more in taxes. And if we go on to sell our homes, we pay a tax on any gain we realize.

The privileges our richest enjoy at tax time extend neatly to the generous annual compensation that our top corporate executives pocket. Major corporate CEOs, the Economic Policy Institute has just reported, last year realized $22.1 million in compensation, 290 times the pay that went to typical U.S. workers.

Over three-quarters of this CEO compensation came in stock-related pay, as either options to buy stock at a future date at a below-market price or as awards of stock that come free after a “vesting” period. Both options and vested stock awards arrive awash with nifty tax workarounds that can have top execs paying taxes on their lush compensation at lower tax rates than their workers.

The good news amid all this tax dodging by our richest? In 2025, we have a real shot at taking the rich people-friendly magic out of our current federal tax code.

What makes 2025 so special? By the year’s end, most of the tax giveaways to the rich that Donald Trump signed into law in 2017 will expire. That reality will have rich people-friendly lawmakers entering next year absolutely desperate to renew those giveaways before that expiration takes place.

If Donald Trump wins election this November and arrives back in office with congressional majorities willing to follow his lead, our richest will gain that renewal. In 2026, the Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy calculates, that renewal would save our richest 1 percent — taxpayers with incomes over $914,900 — 46 times more than average taxpayers making between $55,100 and $94,100.

If Election Day this November produces a different outcome, on the other hand, the lobbyist armies of our richest could be facing the sorts of legislative defeats America’s rich haven’t seen since Franklin Roosevelt sat in the White House — but only if those of us who seek a more equal America get our act together and organize to create a tax code that coddles our many, not our richest few.

The just-announced Fair Share America coalition is aiming to lead that organizing effort, and some 300 state and national organizations have already signed on. These groups range from top research centers and America’s largest union, the National Education Association, to tax justice advocacy groups in states ranging from New Jersey and Pennsylvania to Michigan and Montana.

By January, Fair Share America is aiming to run at least a thousand organizations strong.

The activist who’ll be leading the Fair Share America, Kristen Crowell, brings an encouraging record of organizing success. In 2022, she led the Massachusetts grassroots effort that won a 4 percent surtax on taxable income over $1 million. That surtax, here in 2024, has already generated over a billion dollars in new revenue for public education and transportation.

Let the battle begin!

Sam Pizzigati, an Institute for Policy Studies associate fellow, co-edits Inequality.org. His latest books include The Case for a Maximum Wage and The Rich Don’t Always Win: The Forgotten Triumph over Plutocracy that Created the American Middle Class, 1900-1970.

[END]
---
[1] Url: https://inequality.org/great-divide/could-2025-end-up-a-nightmare-for-our-tax-averse-rich/

Published and (C) by Common Dreams
Content appears here under this condition or license: Creative Commons CC BY-NC-ND 3.0..

via Magical.Fish Gopher News Feeds:
gopher://magical.fish/1/feeds/news/commondreams/