The philosophical, economic, and political case for raising capital gains taxes.
By Eliot Spitzer | Posted Monday, Feb. 6, 2012, at 12:32 PM ET
The U.S. tax code: Never has so much been done by so many for so few
who need so little. The recent public debate about the inequities built
into the tax code—triggered by the disclosure of Mitt Romney’s tax returns—is all for the good. So is the call for a “Romney rule”
mandating that capital gains be treated as ordinary income, and so be
subject to the same top marginal rate of 35 percent that applies to
ordinary income, rather than the current top rate of 15 percent.
But we shouldn’t raise the capital gains tax just because it’s a
popular idea. The rate should rise for philosophical, economic, and
political reasons, as several colleagues and I argued in a recent debate at the Maxwell School of Public Policy at Syracuse University.
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