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Who’s Very Important?
By Paul Krugman
July 12, 2012
“Is there a V.I.P. entrance?
We are V.I.P.” That remark, by a donor waiting to get in to one of Mitt
Romney’s recent fund-raisers in the Hamptons,
pretty much sums up the attitude of America ’s wealthy elite. Mr.
Romney’s base — never mind the top 1 percent, we’re talking about the top 0.01
percent or higher — is composed of very self-important people.
Specifically, these are
people who believe that they are, as
another Romney donor put it, “the engine of the economy”;
they should be cherished, and the taxes they pay, which are already at an
80-year low, should be cut even further. Unfortunately, said yet another donor,
the “common person” — for example, the “nails ladies” — just doesn’t get it.
O.K., it’s easy to mock these
people, but the joke’s really on us. For the “we are V.I.P.” crowd has fully
captured the modern Republican Party, to such an extent that leading
Republicans consider Mr. Romney’s apparent use of multimillion-dollar offshore
accounts to dodge federal taxes not just acceptable but praiseworthy: “It’s
really American to avoid paying taxes, legally,” declared
Senator Lindsey Graham, Republican of South Carolina.
And there is, of course, a good chance that Republicans will control both
Congress and the White House next year.
If that happens, we’ll see a
sharp turn toward economic policies based on the proposition that we need to be
especially solicitous toward the superrich — I’m sorry, I mean the “job
creators.” So it’s important to understand why that’s wrong.
The first thing you need to
know is that America
wasn’t always like this. When John F. Kennedy was elected president, the top
0.01 percent was only about a quarter as rich compared with the typical family
as it is now — and members of that class paid much higher taxes than they do
today. Yet somehow we managed to have a dynamic, innovative economy that was
the envy of the world. The superrich may imagine that their wealth makes the
world go round, but history says otherwise.
To this historical
observation we should add another note: quite a few of today’s superrich, Mr.
Romney included, make or made their money in the financial sector, buying and
selling assets rather than building businesses in the old-fashioned sense.
Indeed, the soaring share of the wealthy in national income went hand in hand
with the explosive growth of Wall Street.
Not long ago, we were told
that all this wheeling and dealing was good for everyone, that it was making
the economy both more efficient and more stable. Instead, it turned out that
modern finance was laying the foundation for a severe economic crisis whose
fallout continues to afflict millions of Americans, and that taxpayers had to
bail out many of those supposedly brilliant bankers to prevent an even worse
crisis. So at least some members of the top 0.01 percent are best viewed as job
destroyers rather than job creators.
Did I mention that those
bailed-out bankers are now overwhelmingly backing Mr. Romney, who promises to
reverse the mild financial reforms introduced after the crisis?
To be sure, many and probably
most of the rich do, in fact, contribute positively to the economy. However,
they also receive large monetary rewards. Yet somehow $20 million-plus in
annual income isn’t enough. They want to be revered, too, and given special
treatment in the form of low taxes. And that is more than they deserve. After
all, the “common person” also makes a positive contribution to the economy. Why
single out the rich for extra praise and perks?
What about the argument that
we must keep taxes on the rich low lest we remove their incentive to create
wealth? The answer is that we
have a lot of historical evidence, going all the way back to the
1920s, on the effects of tax increases on the rich, and none of it supports the
view that the kinds of tax-rate changes for the rich currently on the table —
President Obama’s proposal for a modest rise, Mr. Romney’s call for further
cuts — would have any major effect on incentives. Remember when all the usual
suspects claimed that the economy would crash when Bill Clinton raised taxes in
1993?
Furthermore, if you’re really
concerned about the incentive effects of public policy, you should be focused
not on the rich but on workers making $20,000 to $30,000 a year, who are often
penalized for any gain in income because they end up losing means-tested
benefits like Medicaid and food stamps. I’ll have more to say about that in
another column. By the way, in 2010, the average annual wage of manicurists —
“nails ladies,” in Romney-donor speak — was $21,760.
So, are the very rich V.I.P.?
No, they aren’t — at least no more so than other working Americans. And the
“common person” will be hurt, not helped, if we end up with government of the
0.01 percent, by the 0.01 percent, for the 0.01 percent.
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