Wealth Taxation in the United States. Edward N. Wolff. NBER Working
Paper No. 26544. December 2019. https://www.nber.org/papers/w26544
Abstract:
The paper analyzes the fiscal effects of a Swiss-type tax on household
wealth, with a $120,000 exemption and marginal tax rates running from
0.05 to 0.3 percent on $2,400,000 or more of wealth. It also considers a
wealth tax proposed by Senator Elizabeth Warren with a $50,000,000
exemption, a two percent tax on wealth above that and a one percent
surcharge on wealth above $1,000,000,000. Based on the 2016 Survey of
Consumer Finances, the Swiss tax would yield $189.3 billion and the
Warren tax $303.4 billion. Only 0.07 percent of households would pay the
Warren tax, compared to 44.3 percent for the Swiss tax. The Swiss tax
would have a very small effect on income inequality, lowering the
post-tax Gini coefficient by 0.004 Gini points. The effect of the Swiss
tax and Warren tax on wealth inequality is miniscule, lowering the Gini
coefficient by at most 0.0005 Gini points.
Monday, December 16, 2019
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