6albion
2falsewitness
1falsewitness
4confidencegames
2lookingforthegoodwar
Storyparadox1
2lafayette
499
6confidencegames
Susie King Taylor2 360x1000
1gucci
3albion
1lafayette
2paradise
Gilgamesh 360x1000
10abion
299
11632
Spottswood William Robinson 360x1000
Margaret Fuller1 360x1000
Brendan Beehan 360x1000
Edmund Burke 360x1000
7albion
1jesusandjohnwayne
7confidencegames
Learned Hand 360x1000
Margaret Fuller 2 360x1000
Margaret Fuller5 360x1000
9albion
1empireofpain
Adam Gopnik 360x1000
199
storyparadox2
5albion
3theleastofus
4albion
Mary Ann Evans 360x1000
storyparadox3
2gucci
Lafayette and Jefferson 360x1000
Tad Friend 360x1000
Thomas Piketty3 360x1000
1transcendentalist
2defense
Richard Posner 360x1000
Maurice B Foley 360x1000
Anthony McCann2 360x1000
13albion
2trap
AlexRosenberg
1paradide
2theleastofus
2confidencegames
1lauber
Anthony McCann1 360x1000
2transadentilist
3paradise
Mark V Holmes 360x1000
Betty Friedan 360x1000
1defense
399
Margaret Fuller4 360x1000
1theleasofus
Margaret Fuller2 360x1000
Maria Popova 360x1000
1confidencegames
Margaret Fuller 360x1000
14albion
Office of Chief Counsel 360x1000
1albion
Thomas Piketty1 360x1000
11albion
Stormy Daniels 360x1000
George M Cohan and Lerarned Hand 360x1000
James Gould Cozzens 360x1000
1lookingforthegoodwar
Margaret Fuller3 360x1000
Ruth Bader Ginsburg 360x1000
lifeinmiddlemarch1
2albion
Susie King Taylor 360x1000
8albion'
5confidencegames
2jesusandjohnwayne
LillianFaderman
Thomas Piketty2 360x1000
1madoff
lifeinmiddlemarch2
3confidencegames
George F Wil...360x1000
12albion
3defense
Samuel Johnson 360x1000
1trap

Originally published on Forbes.com May 13th, 2014

Capital In The Twenty-First Century – The Cliff Notes

Unless you have been hiding out somewhere, you have probably heard about Thomas Piketty’s Capital In The Twenty-First Century.  If you don’t want to take the time to read the whole thing (It is on the longish side), you can get the gist of it in one of the appendices titled “The Central Contradiction of Capitalism: r > g“.

The inequality r > g implies that wealth accumulated in the past grows more rapidly than output and wages.  The inequality expresses a fundamental logical contradiction.  The entrepreneur inevitably tends to become a rentier, more and more dominant over those who own nothing but their labor.  Once constituted capital reproduces itself faster than output increases.  The past devours the future.

The History Lesson With Some Literature Thrown In

Much of the book is dedicated to explaining why the overwhelming force of inherited wealth contradicts much of the experience of the twentieth century.  Piketty points to typical novels in the 19th Century, particularly those of Jane Austen and Balzac, to show how overwhelming the influence of inheritance was on even the moderately prosperous.

It brought to my mind a discussion we had when I was a junior in high school.  We had read The Moonstone by Wilkie Collins and the thing that struck us more than anything was that none of the characters seemed to have jobs.  Mr. Canavan laughed and explained English gentry life to us.  As Piketty explains it, all that capital that had been accumulating for centuries was hit with a series of shocks beginning in 1914, so that in our lifetimes, most wealth was the result of recent accumulation.

…..the reduction of inequality that took place in most developed countries between 1910 and 1950 was above all a consequence of war and of policies adopted to cope with the shocks of war.

Ultimately, the decline in the capital/income ratio between 1913 and 1950 is the history of Europe’s suicide, and in particular of the euthanasia of European capitalists.

….the reason why wealth today is not as unequally distributed as in the past is simply that not enough time has passed since 1945.

In the 19th Century extreme inequality was entirely unremarkable – even more in the United States than in Europe thanks to the New World’s Peculiar Institution:

What one finds is that the total market value of slaves represented nearly a year and a half of US national income in the late eighteenth century and the first half of the nineteenth century, which is roughly equal to the total value of farmland.

All told, southern slave owners in the New World controlled more wealth than the landlords of old Europe. Their farmland was not worth very much, but since they had the bright idea of owning not just the land but also the labor force needed to work that land, their total capital was even greater.

In the South we find a world where inequalities of ownership took the most extreme and violent form possible, since one half of the population owned the other half.

Policy Recommendations

Of course, what is of most interest to a tax blogger are Pikitty’s policy recommendations.  Although it is almost incidental, since he is more concerned about wealth inequality, Piketty recommends a very high 80%+ tax on high incomes – kicking in at somewhere between $500,000 and a million.  He believes that the “super manager” salaries that have become prevalent in the Anglo-Saxon countries are a result of our moving away from high marginal rates.

what primarily characterizes the United States at the moment is a record level of inequality of income from labor (probably higher than in any other society at any time in the past,

Piketty is more interested in reducing the mega-salaries than the revenue that would be raised from the higher the rates.  He is dismissive of concerns about such a measure harming productivity.

Indeed, they indicate that levying confiscatory rates on top incomes is not only possible but also the only way to stem the observed increase in very high salaries. According to our estimates, the optimal top tax rate in the developed countries is probably above 80 percent.

The evidence suggests that a rate on the order of 80 percent on incomes over $500,000 or $1 million a year not only would not reduce the growth of the US economy but would in fact distribute the fruits of growth more widely while imposing reasonable limits on economically useless (or even harmful) behavior.

The idea that all US executives would immediately flee to Canada and Mexico and no one with the competence or motivation to run the economy would remain is not only contradicted by historical experience and by all the firm-level data at our disposal; it is also devoid of common sense.

Piketty’s main policy recommendation is a global wealth tax (if not global than at least over a large region).  Even a fairly modest global wealth tax would create statistical transparency.  When you look at the wealth of a nation, you can consider the resources of that nation. Some of those resources will be owned by foreigners.  Of course the residents of the nation will also own foreign assets.  As anybody who has done a consolidated financial statement should know, that should all balance out if you looked at the whole world.  Only it doesn’t.

As I have shown, the planet’s financial accounts are not in balance. (Earth seems to be perpetually indebted to Mars.)

An 0.1 percent tax on capital would be more in the nature of a compulsory reporting law than a true tax. Everyone would be required to report ownership of capital assets to the world’s financial authorities in order to be recognized as the legal owner, with all the advantages and disadvantages thereof.

The main reason for the capital tax is to prevent Piketty’s vision of exploding inequality.

……..no matter how justified inequalities of wealth may be initially, fortunes can grow and perpetuate themselves beyond all reasonable limits and beyond any possible rational justification in terms of social utility.

The primary purpose of the capital tax is not to finance the social state but to regulate capitalism. The goal is first to stop the indefinite increase of inequality of wealth, and second to impose effective regulation on the financial and banking system in order to avoid crises.

Is This Guy Serious?

My career has spanned the period in which the United States moved from high marginal rates – 70% when I started – to much lower rates and something of a war on tax shelters.  The high marginal rates seemed to create an irresistible impulse to use the tax code as the Swiss Army knife of social policy.  Something tells me that high marginal rates will not all of a sudden give us CEOs who will say “Screw it, I’ll just take 400 grand.  Not much point in having more.”  Rather, there will be a renaissance of shelter activity.

The wealth tax presents really serious implementation problems, which I discussed with the presidential candidate of the one party that has a wealth tax on its platform

Piketty’s proposals are unlikely to get serious traction in either of the major parties in the foreseeable future.  Still, the popularity of this work in some circles might be viewed as a warning shot across the bow of the privatization ship that might have gone a bit too far.

If you have free trade and free circulation of capital and people but destroy the social state and all forms of progressive taxation, the temptations of defensive nationalism and identity politics will very likely grow stronger than ever in both Europe and the United States.

This is the main justification for a progressive annual tax on the largest fortunes worldwide. Such a tax is the only way of democratically controlling this potentially explosive process while preserving entrepreneurial dynamism and international economic openness.

And In The Long Run 

John Maynard Keynes famously said that in the long run, we are all dead, but he also wrote something that those inclined to write Piketty’s proposals off as moonshine might want to consider.

The ideas of economists and political philosophers, both when they are right and when they are wrong, are more powerful than is commonly understood. Indeed the world is ruled by little else. Practical men, who believe themselves to be quite exempt from any intellectual influence, are usually the slaves of some defunct economist. Madmen in authority, who hear voices in the air, are distilling their frenzy from some academic scribbler of a few years back. I am sure that the power of vested interests is vastly exaggerated compared with the gradual encroachment of ideas.

You can follow me on twitter @peterreillycpa.