Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Biden’s mirage: The billionair­e tax

Levy on ‘unrealized’ gains might look good, but would be a nightmare

- By Rich Robledo Rich Robledo is a small-business owner and real estate broker. He writes from Las Vegas.

TWO men, dressed in beige, look to the horizon toward what appears to be a lake in the desert. In the famous scene from “Lawrence of Arabia” that Steven Spielberg said was the best “miracle” ever put on film, the lake evaporates

NEVADA VIEWS

as Omar Sharif draws near — it’s not really a lake at all, but an optical phenomenon caused by refraction known as a mirage. While this natural event can also be observed in real life on both desert sands and highway asphalt, there’s a new type of mirage, one political in nature, rising from the swamp of Washington, D.C.

From a distance, the “billionair­es’ minimum income tax” in President Joe Biden’s $5.8 trillion budget blueprint appears as a palpable pay-for, raising $360 billion in new revenue over 10 years, helping to reduce the deficit and claiming to help level the wealth gap between the rich and poor.

But when one steps closer (and actually reads the proposed language), the tax is anything but its title.

First, the tax would apply also apply to all millionair­es making more than $100 million. Second, the tax doesn’t just levy a 20 percent tax on income but applies to unrealized gains on every asset belonging to the household — be it a business, farm, patent or other intellectu­al property, retirement or other investment.

While legislator­s have attempted to propose taxing unrealized capital gains before — including a wealth tax by Sens. Elizabeth Warren and Bernie Sanders, as well as the now-infamous “double death tax” that would have upended multigener­ational American farms, ranches and small businesses — the strange aspect of this proposal is that almost no one likes it.

Lawrence Summers, former Treasury secretary under President Clinton, made his opposition clear when he said, “The billionair­es’ tax is a bad idea whose time will never come. … It’s mislabeled to give it a kind of populist appeal.” In an interview with CNBC, Rep. Josh Gottheimer provided even more doubt when he stated, “The billionair­e tax and how they’ve put that forward doesn’t make much sense. … I really don’t think that proposal is going anywhere.”

There’s many reasons to dislike this proposed tax, including the huge administra­tive burden and costs it would take for families to comply, not to mention the reality of adding yet another enforcemen­t issue for the bogged-down IRS, already 6 million and counting unprocesse­d returns behind.

In addition, legal experts are mulling the notion that defining unrealized gains on assets as taxable income may not even be constituti­onal — not to mention how to split up this direct federal asset tax among states, given that not all states have billionair­es.

Then there’s the overall implicatio­n of reforming our tax laws to begin capping what essentiall­y amounts to “success” also known as the American Dream. European countries tried this method of attempting to fill government coffers

Defining unrealized gains on assets as taxable income may not even be constituti­onal.

in the name of wealth equality, only to have it backfire in their bureaucrat­ic faces. The wealthy began to leave countries that instituted a wealth tax and the resulting revenue shortfalls became a burden on the middle class.

Of the 12 wealth taxes instituted in European countries in the ’90s, only three remain.

Nevada will be closely watched during this election cycle. Sens. Catherine Cortez Masto and Jacky Rosen have a lot on their plate — including inflation, spiking gasoline prices, economic recovery from COVID, the second-worst unemployme­nt numbers in the country and supply chain issues. Supporting this new tax proposal just to pay for more government spending would remind Nevadans that political consequenc­es, unlike mirages, are very real in these challengin­g times.

 ?? Andrew Harnik The Associated Press ??
Andrew Harnik The Associated Press

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States