There’s a lot
of talk these days about the income gap between the rich and the not-so-rich.
At the top end, salaries and bonuses are
measured in the tens of millions, while the minimum wage remains at $7.75 an
hour, where it has been since 2000.
Nowhere among
advanced countries is the gap greater or growing faster than in the United
States. Reducing the gap is one reason
for the drive to increase the minimum wage.
Some see a
growing income gap as giving the wealthy economic and political power to
dominate the lives of the rest of the population. Such an outcome could undermine democracy and
lead to bad decisions on matters ranging from the environment to health care,
they say.
Along comes Thomas
Piketty. Chances are you have never
heard of him, but he is one of the hottest thinkers around these days. He’s a French economist with a rock star’s reputation.
He focuses on the increasing gap between
the wealthiest and the poorest people.
The income
spread could be reduced by increasing pay at the bottom. That could help, but Piketty’s best-selling
book goes much further.
Because the
wealthiest people receive incomes greater than they need for a good life, they
save some of what they make. Their
savings go into investments producing even more wealth, gained without their
having to put in any more work.
The rest of
the people must live on their incomes, so have little or nothing to
invest. The result is their incomes grow
slowly, dependent on pay raises and not much on income from investments.
After World
War II, the gap between the wealthy and others declined in the United States,
because of extremely high tax rates on those with high incomes. They had less money available to make
themselves wealthier.
But, since
then, changes in tax rates have benefited the wealthiest people more than any
other group. While a considerable number
of workers now mainly pay payroll taxes and little or no income tax, the amount
of their tax relief is small compared to the cuts for the rich.
The top tax
rate for the wealthy has fallen from 94 percent to 39.6 percent of their
taxable income.
Piketty believes
the income gap should be reduced and proposes two solutions.
You could
reduce the gap between rich and poor, if you took away some of the wealth of
the rich. Piketty suggests a wealth tax,
kicking in at about $1.4 million, should be levied. By taking money away from the wealthy, you could
reduce the gap and their clout.
What would be
done with the revenues? It could fund a
higher minimum wage for the millions working for governments at all
levels. It could funnel more help to
those at the bottom of the ladder.
In short,
Piketty’s wealth tax might lead to income redistribution. In a country where virtually any government service
may be branded as “socialist,” the American income gap is unlikely to be
reduced by redistribution.
Money will
not go from the investment accounts of the wealthiest into the paychecks of
low-income workers.
The advocates
of amassing great wealth say the wealthy will make investments in companies
creating jobs for many others. But those
companies may create jobs in China or, through technology investment, reduce
their need for labor.
Piketty’s
alternative solution may be more practical.
He sees the wealthy also having more of a form of capital than the less
fortunate – education. In his ideal
formula, higher taxes on wealth could fund greater access to education.
With more and
better education, people could develop their own businesses or become qualified
for new technological and higher paying jobs.
In other words, they would begin to have the kind of opportunities now
more readily available to the rich and, in the process, reduce the income gap.
While the
wealth tax idea is likely to go nowhere, at least in the United States, the
proposal for improving education is both reasonable and possible. And it pays off. There’s plenty of proof that the better
educated you are, the higher your income.
In some
respects, this country is already moving on this point. A high school education is no longer
enough. Community colleges are booming,
because they produce graduates trained to meet the most current needs. Maine’s are a great example of this.
With his
wealth tax, Piketty may not understand how America works, but, with his
emphasis on education, he does have a good idea about how to get America back
to work.