Tax
cuts for the rich, even if they’re dead, is a somehow a non-partisan issue
By Steve
Ahlquist UpriseRI
Both Democrats and
Republicans were quick to champion the idea of eliminating the estate tax after
the Providence Journal reported
that former Rhode Island Governor Lincoln
Chafee was moving to
Wyoming.
Representative Stephen
Ucci (Democrat, District 42, Johnston) pounced on the story to
tweet:
“Name a state with plenty of horses and no estate tax?” This is why we need to eliminate the estate tax completely. We’re losing wealthy philanthropic Rhode Islanders. #killthedeathtax
Chafee, in the
Providence Journal piece, never mentions the estate tax as a reason for moving.
Instead he talks about the wildlife and about returning to a state where he had
worked as a blacksmith in his early years.
Ucci wasn’t alone in
assuming, without evidence, that Rhode Island’s estate tax was the reason for
Chafee’s move. Rhode Island
Republican Party Chair Brandon
Bell issued a press release that read, in part, “We need to keep
Chafee and other wealthy, charitable individuals in Rhode Island. But we can
only do this by lowering our taxes. This begins by eliminating Rhode Island’s
estate tax.”
I emailed Chafee and
asked him about this. Chafee responded by saying, “…there were many factors in
making this decision. Have you had a chance to visit this area? Really
spectacular.”
Addressing the 2019 Rhode
Island Small Business Economic Summit, Speaker Nicholas Mattiello (Democrat,
District 15, Cranston) spoke about his perception that the estate tax needed to
be eliminated.
“…I have not talked to
an estate planner or an accountant, that has not told me that our productive citizens are leaving the State of Rhode
Island,” said the Speaker. “…we’re not doing everything we can to keep
our successful folks here.”
“Now unfortunately, that
one becomes a little bit political,” continued the Speaker. “Ideology kind of
rears its’ ugly head in that particular issue. And I’m not sure why but why
wouldn’t we want our successful people to
stay here to continue to pay taxes here, to continue to invest, continue to
donate? So that’s going to be one that we at least have a conversation about
and hopefully we can do something and move to make Rhode Island a little bit
more competitive.” [emphasis mine]
Note that Mattiello
doesn’t call the people who may pay an estate tax when they die wealthy or
rich. He calls them “productive citizens,” “successful folks” and “successful
people.”
Mattiello uses the words
“Productive” and “Successful” to draw a distinction between the wealthy and the
vast majority of us who are unproductive and unsuccessful because we won’t
leave behind estates worth more than $1.5 million dollars when we die.
And “when
we die” is important because the person who pays the estate tax, contrary to
everything you may hear, is dead. Dead people who are somehow productive and
successful.
Only 17 states have
estate taxes, including Rhode
Island, Massachusetts, Connecticut, Vermont and Maine.
To pay estate taxes in
Rhode Island, you have to satisfy two conditions: (1) You have to have an
estate worth in excess of $1.5 million, and (2) You have to be dead. You will
never pay any estate taxes in your lifetime.
This means that most
people will never pay an estate tax. In Rhode Island, the first $1.5 million
dollars of an estate isn’t taxed at all. This wasn’t always the case.
In 2014 the General
Assembly slashed the estate tax by raising the estate tax threshold from
$921,655 to $1.5 million. At the same time, the estate tax was changed. Prior
to 2014, being even one dollar over the threshold meant that the entire estate
was taxable. Now Rhode Island taxes only the money in excess of $1.5 million.
[Let me note here that
I’m using the $1.5 million as a static number, when in fact this number
increases every year. In 2017, the General Assembly changed the estate tax so
that the exception started to be adjusted for inflation. In 2018 the exception
was $1,537,656. If the estate was worth $1,537,657, Rhode Island would only
apply taxes to a single dollar.]
Interestingly, the
Representative who lead the charge on estate tax reform in 2014 was Deborah Ruggiero (Democrat,
District 74, Jamestown), one of the members of the “progressive” Reform Caucus that
challenged the leadership and power of the Speaker early in the 2019 session.
Just another reminder that Democrats and Republicans are equally liable to
champion tax breaks for the rich, even if the rich in question are dead.
Since reforming the
estate tax laws in 2014 and 2017, Rhode Island has foregone $103.2 million in
revenue. A total of 2,304 dead people paid the estate tax, an average of 576
people a year.
[The economic data I’m
using in this piece are from the Economic Progress Institute,
but the opinions expressed here are all mine.]
Reducing taxes on the
rich is a non-partisan issue, but it makes for good theater sometimes.
For
instance, when Trump pushed through his signature federal tax cuts, which
benefited the rich to the detriment of the middle class and the poor, Rhode
Island Governor Gina Raimondo,
a Democrat, issued a statement that read, in part, “The Republican-Trump Tax
Bill is an unconscionable handout to millionaires and billionaires paid for by
working families from cities and towns like Cranston, Warwick, Providence and every
other part of Rhode Island.”
This did not stop
Raimondo from replicating key provisions from
Trump’s tax cuts in her most recent budget proposal. When I asked the
Governor’s office about this apparent contradiction, I was told by Brenna McCabe, at the Rhode Island Department of
Administration that, “This is not a partisan issue.”
[As a side note,
Representative Ucci, who issued the tweet near the top of this piece, also
works for the law firm of Adler,
Pollock and Sheehan, which threw Raimondo an expensive fundraising
breakfast Friday morning. Ucci was one of the hosts
for the fundraiser.]
Tax cuts for the rich
are a non-partisan issue because neither party cares about the poor and the
middle class: They only answer to those with money. And those with money want
only one thing: More money. Even if they’re dead, apparently.
“It is time for State
House politicians, like House Speaker Nicholas Mattiello, to stop talking about
reducing the estate tax, and actually get rid of it,” wrote RI GOP Chair Bell
in his press release. “Make this the year Rhode Island eliminates its death
tax. Let’s Keep Chafee in Rhode Island.”
Uh, yeah. That’s not why
Chafee left.