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Transatlantic Blog

What you need to know about Elizabeth Warren’s wealth tax

    On Thursday, Senator Elizabeth Warren announced on Twitter that she will institute a wealth tax if she is elected president in 2020. Here are the facts you need to know:

    Warren tweeted her plan on Thursday afternoon.

    We need structural change. That’s why I’m proposing something brand new – an annual tax on the wealth of the richest Americans. I’m calling it the “Ultra-Millionaire Tax" & it applies to that tippy top 0.1% –  those with a net worth of over $50M.

    — Elizabeth Warren (@ewarren) January 24, 2019


    What are the details of Warren’s wealth tax?

    Warren would impose a tax of two percent on any individual who has wealth (not income) with an estimated worth of $50 million, or three percent for those with net assets of more than $1 billion.

    Nations with wealth taxes have steadily repealed them

    Nine OECD nations have abolished their wealth tax since 1990. This includes Austria, Denmark, Germany, Finland, Luxembourg, and Sweden. France converted its former wealth tax into a graduated national real estate tax.

    Only three OECD members have wealth taxes: Norway, Spain, and Switzerland. (Italy also imposes a tax on certain financial holdings overseas.)

    How much money would Warren’s proposed wealth tax raise?

    “The wealth tax would raise $2.75 trillion over a 10-year period from about 75,000 families,” according to Emmanuel Saez of the University of California at Berkeley, who helped Warren draft the plan. However, this assumes the tax has no negative consequences for the economy, which other nations have experienced.

    Wealth taxes cost nations population, investment, and jobs

    The wealth tax caused 513 taxpayers each year to leave France between 1982 and 2017.

    Their departure did not just remove the wealth they had in the bank; it also deprived the country of all the investment and economic benefits that their billions would have created. Fondation iFRAP estimates the expatriates eligible for its wealth tax (Impôt de solidarité sur la fortune, or ISF) took €143 billion with them; the Coe-Rexecode Institute estimated the cumulative total of the actual assets expatriated for fiscal reasons to “a little more than €200 billion.”

    This translates to 400,000 jobs never created – or just under two percent of France’s total unemployment.

    Similarly, Sweden’s wealth tax raised $500 million but cost the nation an estimated $166 billion before the nation abolished it in 2007.

    The wealth tax reduces the net amount of taxes collected

    France’s wealth tax costs the government an average of €5 billion a year in tax revenue, according to Kedge Business School. France’s wealth tax “brought in approximately €5 billion for the state in 2017 while at the same time depriving it of €7.5 billion due to the resulting expatriation,” according to Professor Eric Pichet.

    In fact, the wealth tax reduces net revenues collected by the wealth tax itself. Fondation iFRAP estimates that the ISF reduced the amount of tax revenue raised by the ISF by an estimated €15.2 billion since 1982.

    How would Warren prevent capital flight?

    Warren plans to charge anyone attempting to renounce U.S. citizenship an unspecified, one-time penalty, if they are eligible for the wealth tax. She would also hike IRS funding so that IRS agents can audit a certain number of people eligible taxpayers each year.

    The taxes raise little money and fail to redistribute wealth

    An OECD report earlier this year concluded that “net wealth taxes have frequently failed to meet their redistributive goals. The revenues collected from net wealth taxes have also, with a few exceptions, been very low.”

    A wealth tax taxes the same income twice

    The wealth tax would levy an additional tax on money that Americans saved after paying income or capital gains taxes. This constitutes double taxation, unless the income tax is repealed. (Warren wants to raise both income and business taxes.)

    Wealth taxes are difficult to calculate

    Income or capital gains taxes are relatively clear-cut: The total dollar figures are not in dispute. This is not true for the wealth tax. Either the federal government would have to hire an army of appraisers to determine the value of every possession owned by the wealthy – from homes to vehicles to rare books – or the wealthy would hire their own appraisers, who would have an incentive to minimize values.

    Some items are inherently difficult to evaluate. The value of private businesses – which account for 40 percent of the wealth owned by top one percent of Americans – fluctuates daily. It is impossible to know the value of a business until it is sold.

    Furthermore, almost two-thirds of the wealthiest Americans’ holdings are non-financial items: homes, cars, real estate, etc. These items provide no income and can only be monetized if they are sold.

    A wealth tax is unconstitutional

    Thomas Piketty, who advocated a wealth tax in his bestselling Capital in the Twenty-First Century, has admitted, “I realize that this is unconstitutional, but constitutions have been changed throughout history.” The U.S. Constitution bars the federal government from imposing direct taxes under most circumstances. Article I, Section 9, Clause 4 states, “No Capitation, or other direct, Tax shall be laid, unless in Proportion to the Census or enumeration herein before directed to be taken.” The Supreme Court struck down a federal income tax as unconstitutional in its 1895 Pollock v. Farmers’ Loan & Trust Co. decision, because it is a direct tax. Only the Sixteenth Amendment allowed an income tax to take effect. Warren has not thus far advocated a constitutional amendment, which would require ratification by three-quarter of the states. However, constitutionality has not been the Left’s key criterion in evaluating tax or spending proposals.


    Rev. Ben Johnson (@therightswriter) is an Eastern Orthodox priest and served as executive editor of the Acton Institute from 2016 to 2021. Previously, he worked for LifeSiteNews and FrontPageMag.com, where he wrote three books, including Party of Defeat (with David Horowitz, 2008). His work has appeared in National Review, the American Spectator, and The Guardian, among other outlets. His personal websites are therightswriter.com and RevBenJohnson.com.