Bernie Sanders Proposes Estate Tax Of Up To 77 Percent For Billionaires

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Independent Sen. Bernie Sanders is proposing to expand the estate tax on wealthy Americans, including a rate of as much as 77 percent on the value of estates above $1 billion.

Sanders of Vermont, who’s considering a second run for president, said in a statement that his plan would apply to the wealthiest 0.2 percent of Americans. It would set a 45 percent tax on the value of estates between $3.5 million and $10 million, increasing gradually to 77 percent for amounts more than $1 billion. The current estate tax kicks in when an estate is worth about $11 million.

The legislation would raise up to $2.2 trillion in taxes from the families of all 588 billionaires in the U.S. with a combined net worth of more than $3 trillion, according to a summary of the plan.

Sanders’s plan comes as potential Democratic challengers to President Donald Trump eye progressive tax ideas intended to reduce income inequality. Sen. Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts has proposed an annual 2 percent tax on households worth more than $50 million. Sanders, who ran in the Democratic primary against Hillary Clinton in 2016, hasn’t yet said whether he’ll run in 2020.

The estate tax exemption was $3.5 million as recently as 2009. The 2017 GOP tax overhaul increased the exemption to $11 million through 2025, and some Senate Republicans are renewing an effort to repeal the tax entirely.

While Sanders and Warren represent one approach to reducing income inequality — breaking up concentrations of wealth among top earners — other Democratic candidates are directing their efforts toward the lowest income brackets.

Polls show that voters are becoming more receptive to the idea of increasing taxes on the wealthy. Freshman Democratic Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez of New York floated a 70 percent top tax rate on incomes of $10 million or more, an idea that 59 percent of people supported in a Hill-HarrisX poll conducted Jan. 12-13.

The Sanders plan would nearly double the estate tax liability’s that some of the wealthiest Americans would owe under current law, according to calculations released by the senator along with details of the proposal. Amazon.com founder Jeff Bezos, the world’s richest man, would owe $101 billion based on his current net-worth, up from $53 billion. Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg’s estate tax liability would jump to $41 billion from $22 billion.

The Sanders legislation would also end tax breaks for so-called dynasty trusts, estate planning tools that’ve gotten more popular under Trump’s tax law, which increased the exemption to about $22 million for a couple.

Dynasty trusts can be funded with cash, stock or other assets, and structured to pay each generation only some of the trust’s proceeds while the rest of the money grows free of estate and gift taxes. With the right planning, a trust funded up to the maximum $22.4 million tax exemption can wind up being worth far more than that.

In his plan, Sanders is including a special break for farmers, allowing them to reduce the value of their land by as much as $3 million to reduce or completely eliminate the amount of estate tax they owe. Critics of the estate tax have said land-rich, cash-poor family farmers are hurt by the tax because they don’t have the liquidity to pay the tax. However, the tax hits relatively few family-owned businesses and farms — about 80 in 2017 — according to the Urban-Brookings Tax Policy Center.

The estate tax exemption has been a favorite lever for Congress to adjust in recent tax legislation. The current roughly $11 million exemption for an individual has risen from $650,000 two decades ago. The winners can end up being estate tax advisers as they continually make adjustments to their client’s plans.

“The more you muck around with the exemption amount, the more you mobilize the estate planning industry and pull money into it,” said Kyle Pomerleau, an economist at the Tax Foundation, a Washington-based research group. “People will continue to shift their affairs around to game the exemption changes.”

(c) 2019, Bloomberg · Arit John, Laura Davison  

{Matzav.com}


6 COMMENTS

  1. Why stops at 77%, tax at 99.9999% . I’m sure those rich billionaires are going to have the drive to continue their business now that they are working for the US government. When jobs start to dissappear because the billionaires lose their motivation-just raise the taxes on the millionaires too. Let them pay 99.9999% taxes too. Then when more jobs dissappear (except those millionaire who are now working for the govt) raise taxes again on those making 6 digit income.
    Whatever happened to american history-NO TAXATION WITHOUT REPRESENTATION , THE BOSTON TEA PARTY and the likes?
    We might as all move to Russia, because that the direction we are going.

  2. Where is Bernie Sanders that this report needs to be recycled from 2 years ago to fool the sheeple that he’s just said it?

  3. Let me tell you
    How it will be
    One for you, nineteen for me
    Because I’m the taxman…. yeah…. the taxman…..
    If you drive I tax the street
    if you walk I tax your feet
    If you sit I tax your seat
    if you’re cold I tax the heat
    Does five per cent appear too small?
    you be thankful I don’t take it all….
    because I’m the taxman….. yeah….
    etc. etc. etc…

  4. Why 77%? How about 75, or 80?
    Since mathematics isn’t one of Bernie’s strong points (what is?), it seems that he just took those numbers out of his thin hair.

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