I'm not sure that it would raise that much money, although I expect that it would raise some, especially if you treated cap gains and dividends identially so that there was no market incentive to structure the financed of companies to favor one over the other.
Originally Posted by TexTushHog
There's a chance that it would raise
some additional revenue, but at the cost of producing distortions and perverse incentives. As I said earlier, when there are capital flow impediments to highest and best uses, everybody loses.
And if you exempt the first $5k - 10k of cap gains and dividends from the normal tax rates -- as I proposed in my original post -- I doubt that you're going to have many of the elderly poor who get fucked out of their meager savings.
Originally Posted by TexTushHog
I think you missed my point. It wasn't that dividend tax hikes would serve to fuck the poor out of their meager savings. It was that non-wealthy retirees who depend in part on dividend income, but are not in high tax brackets, would suffer some degree of capital loss due to downward price pressure caused by asset sales of wealthier high-bracket individuals. High-dividend stocks would obviously be far less attractive to such investors after a big tax hike. Analysts hold differing opinions concerning the quantity of this effect, but hardly anyone thinks it would be zero -- and I daresay
no one who has actually managed portfolios for very high net worth individuals.
However, to me, it is as much an issue of economic fairness as anything. Warren Buffet's oft told story of how his secretary pays a much greater percentage of her income in income taxes (since it's salary) than he pays of his (since it's all cap gains) perfectly illustrates this point.
Originally Posted by TexTushHog
Buffett is a liberal Democrat who believes that
you should pay a much higher tax rate if you're moderately affluent (but not wealthy). However, you might note that he has no intention of doing the same. He's perfectly free to fill out the Treasury form and contribute, but he doesn't do so as far as I know. However, he has set up a foundation through which he will donate all his wealth to presumably excellent causes. Good for him; I applaud that action and urge everyone with significant net worth to do the same.
I understand your point that the tax system seems unfair. My key point is merely that you can't travel very far along the road to "fairness" simply by hiking the top tax rate on capital gains. It just doesn't work that way. Total revenue to the Treasury is about the furthest thing from simply a linear function of the tax rate that you could possibly imagine.