A Pro-Hamas Clown Vandalized a Restaurant Over Its Israeli Flags. There Was Just...
A Most Memorable Hockey Tribute Happened in Columbus Last Night
An International Incident Develops As Emmanuel Macron Feuds With Italy Over…Netflix???
One's Presence Near a Crime Doesn't Make Them an Expert on Gun Policy
Where Were These 230 Doctors Wanting Medical Records Four Years Ago?
Anti-Gun Organization Shocked to Learn Criminals Break Laws
Kamala Offers Black Men Bribe to Get Their Votes
Trump Vows to 'End All Sanctuary Cities Immediately'
Fani Willis Begs Appeals Court to Reinstate Charges Against Trump
Elder Abuse: They're Still Trotting Out Biden to Campaign for Kamala
Apartments in Another City Are Being Taken Over by Tren de Aragua
The CBS News Scandals Keep Getting Worse
A Reality TV Star Admitted That He Pretended to Be Transgender. Here's Why.
The FBI's Violent Crime Stats Suddenly Look a Lot Different
Dems in Disarray: AOC and Fetterman Fighting Online Over Israel
Tipsheet

Study: The Economic Disaster of Raising Top Income Tax Rates

Thomas Piketty, the French academic whose work on inequality has been enthusiastically embraced by the American left, believes that society is headed toward permanent over and underclasses because the wealthiest in society will keep getting wealthier and income mobility will weaken.
Advertisement

To alleviate this, he has a few proposals - one of which is to dramatically raise top individual tax rates. The Tax Foundation has modeled what would happen in two scenarios - a world where we have top tax rates of 80% and 55%, and a world in which we have those top tax rates and investment income is taxed as ordinary income.

The results would be disastrous:

As the author of the report, Will McBride, writes:

If Congress enacted Piketty’s tax rate increases while retaining the current rate cap for long-term capital gains and qualified dividends, the Tax Foundation’s Taxes and Growth model estimates that, after the economy had adjusted, the stock of equipment, structures and other capital used in production would be 7.4 percent lower than otherwise, 2.1 million jobs would be lost, and GDP would be 3.5 percent lower than otherwise (a loss of about $575 billion annually in terms of today’s GDP). The rate cap for long-term capital gains and qualified dividends moderates the damage by shielding much saving and investment from the higher rates. If Congress also abolished the rate cap, the model estimates that the long-run harm would be many times worse: something close to the deindustrialization of the U.S. economy with the capital stock down 42.3 percent, 4.9 million fewer jobs, and 18.1 percent less GDP than otherwise (a loss of about $3 trillion annually in terms of today’s GDP).

Advertisement

Although there are a lot of economists on the left who insist that tax rates and growth aren't correlated, the evidence does not back that up. Piketty's policy prescriptions may help fight inequality, but they'd absolutely decimate economic growth.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement