Why Capital Gains Tax Should Go Up, and Go Up a Lot
By
Eliot Spitzer | Posted
Wednesday, Dec. 5, 2012, at 10:22 AM ET
The fiscal cliff negotiations aren’t just about plugging holes in the
deficit: They are about restoring fairness to our tax code. This should
go beyond merely raising the rates on the top 2 percent of income
earners—the current line in the sand drawn by the White House.
Two of the fundamental economic problems we need to confront are the
increasingly disproportionate percentage of income earned by the top
tier, and the underlying lack of demand that is inhibiting economic
growth. Fortunately both of these trends can be at least partially
reversed in the negotiations now underway, because the tax code—which is
surely going to be reformed as part of this process—is one of the best
tools we have to confront each of these problems. A couple of data
points: First, in 2010, 93 percent of the income
that was added to our economy accrued to the top 1 percent of families.
Second, corporate earnings as a percentage of GDP are at an all-time high—totaling
1.75 trillion in the third quarter of this year, while wages as a
percentage of GDP are at an all-time low—just about 43 percent of GDP.
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