Elon Musk Twitter Stunt Offers ‘Best Argument Imaginable’ for Billionaire Tax, Critics Say
SpaceX owner and Tesla CEO Elon Musk poses on the red carpet of the Axel Springer Award ceremony on December 1, 2020, in Berlin, Germany. (Photo: Britta Pedersen-Pool/Getty Images)
Mega-billionaire Elon Musk’s latestย stuntโaย Twitter pollย asking whether he should sell 10% of his Tesla stockโwas accompanied by a candid admission of what progressives have long seen as a fundamental flaw of the U.S. tax system: For the super-rich, paying income taxes is effectively optional.
After promising to abide by the results of his pollโwhich attracted more than 3.5 million votes and closed with 57.9% endorsing the sell-offโMusk noted that he does “not take a cash salary or bonuses from anywhere.”
“I only have stock,” he added, “thus the only way for me to pay taxes personally is to sell stock.”
While Musk likely would have been forced to sell a chunk of his Tesla shares regardless of the poll’s outcome due to theย structureย of a stock option grant he was awarded in 2012, the Twitter survey called attention to the fact thatย unrealized capital gainsย are not taxed in the U.S., allowing billionaires to accumulate vast wealth for years without paying a penny in federal income taxes.
Capital gains are only “realized”โand thus taxableโwhen an asset such as a stock is sold.
“He is the poster child for why we need a billionaires income tax,” the progressive advocacy group Americans for Tax Fairness (ATF) wrote of Musk in aย tweetย on Sunday. “Billionaires shouldn’t only have to pay taxes when they volunteer to do so.”
The Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy also weighed in:
The fact that Elon Musk conducted an unscientific Twitter poll on whether he should pay taxes symbolizes what is wrong with our tax system.
Itโs no laughing matter that superrich people can manipulate their finances to pay minuscule tax relative to their income. https://t.co/ZNpmhvFHHA
— ITEP (@iteptweets) November 7, 2021
ProPublicaย reportedย in June that Muskโwho is now worth nearly $320 billion after seeing his wealthย balloonย during the coronavirus pandemicโ”paid $0 in federal income taxes” in 2018. When billionaires like Musk need money,ย ProPublicaย noted, “they borrow… pledging the value of shares as collateral.”
“It has been called ‘Buy, Borrow, Die,’ and it’s a wonderful system for the superrich,” the outlet continued. “This system allows them to enjoy luxury cars, yachts, homes on multiple continents, and occasional trips to outer space while reporting, in some cases, a salary of a dollar a year or less to the IRS.”
In an attempt to change the nation’s deeply unequal tax system, Sen. Ron Wyden (D-Ore.) last monthย introducedย an updated version of his Billionaires Income Tax, legislation that would impose an annual levy on billionaires’ unrealized capital gains. Wyden is pushing to include the measure in Democrats’ Build Back Better reconciliation package.
“There are two tax codes in America,” Wyden, chair of the powerful Senate Finance Committee, said in aย statementย after unveiling his bill. “The first is mandatory for workers who pay taxes out of every paycheck. The second is voluntary for billionaires who defer paying taxes for years, if not indefinitely.”
Replying to Musk’s Twitter poll, Wyden on Saturday reiterated the case for his legislation, writing: “Whether or not the world’s wealthiest man pays any taxes at all shouldn’t depend on the results of a Twitter poll.”
“It’s time for the Billionaires Income Tax,” the Oregon Democrat added.
Whether or not the worldโs wealthiest man pays any taxes at all shouldnโt depend on the results of a Twitter poll. Itโs time for the Billionaires Income Tax. https://t.co/KFHw3VZ45H
— Ron Wyden (@RonWyden) November 6, 2021
In aย statementย on Sunday, ATF said that Musk’s Twitter escapade offers the “best argument imaginable for the Billionaires Income Tax now before Congress.”
“While it’s good news that it looks like Elon Musk will finally be paying some taxes on his enormous growth in wealth, billionaires shouldn’t only have to pay taxes when they volunteer to do so,” said Frank Clemente, the group’s executive director. “Under our current, rigged tax code, it’s mandatory for working families to pay each and every year while billionaires only pay when they feel like selling off their assets.”
“Under the Billionaires Income Tax,” Clemente noted, “Musk would also pay every year on the income derived from his wealth growth.โ
Urging congressional Democrats to include the Billionaires Income Tax (BIT) in their reconciliation bill, ATF pointed to aย recent survey dataย showing that “funding the package with this tax makes the bill 20 to 40 points more popular with voters in key battleground districts and statesโincluding among Republicans.”
“Impacting fewer than a thousand fabulously rich Americans, the BIT could raise more than $550 billion to help fund the Democrats’ $1.75 trillion Build Back Better (BBB) plan of social and environmental investments,” the group observed. “President Biden hasย endorsed the tax, which also has theย blessing of Sen. Kyrsten Sinemaย [of Arizona], the Democratic senator otherwise most averse to higher taxes on the wealthy.”
This article is republished from commondreams.org under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.
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