Billionaires
are wailing that Elizabeth Warren’s and Bernie Sanders’s wealth tax proposals
are attacks on free market capitalism.
Warren
“vilifies successful people,” says Jamie Dimon, CEO of JPMorgan Chase.
Rubbish.
There are basically only five ways to accumulate a billion dollars, and none of
them has to do with being successful in free market capitalism.
Jamie
Dimon is worth $1.6 billion. That’s not because he succeeded in the free
market. In 2008 the government bailed out JPMorgan and four other giant Wall
Street banks because it considered them “too big to fail.”
That
bailout is a hidden insurance policy, still in effect, with an estimated value
to the big banks of $83 billion a year. If JPMorgan weren’t so big and was
therefore allowed to fail, Dimon would be worth far less than $1.6 billion.
What
about America’s much-vaulted entrepreneurs, such as Jeff Bezos, now worth $110
billion? You might say Bezos deserves this because he founded and built Amazon.
But
Amazon is a monopolist with nearly 50 percent of all e-commerce retail sales in
America, and e-commerce is one of the biggest sectors of retail sales. In
addition, Amazon’s business is protected by a slew of patents granted by the
U.S. government.
If
the government enforced anti-monopoly laws, and didn’t give Amazon such broad
patents,Bezos would be worth far less than $110 billion.
A
second way to make a billion is to get insider information unavailable to other
investors.
Hedge-fund
maven Steven A. Cohen, worth $12.8 billion, headed up a hedge fund firm in
which, according to a criminal complaint filed by the Justice Department, insider
trading was “substantial, pervasive, and on a scale without known precedent in
the hedge fund industry.”
Nine of Cohen’s present or former employees pleaded guilty or were convicted. Cohen got off with a fine, changed the name of his firm, and apparently is back at the game.
Nine of Cohen’s present or former employees pleaded guilty or were convicted. Cohen got off with a fine, changed the name of his firm, and apparently is back at the game.
Insider
trading is endemic in C-suites, too. SEC researchers have found that corporate
executives are twice as likely to sell their stock on the days following their
own stock buyback announcements as they are in the days leading up to the
announcements.
If
government cracked down on insider-trading, hedge-fund mavens and top corporate
executives wouldn’t be raking in so much money.
A
third way to make a billion is to buy off politicians.
The
Trump tax cut is estimated to save Charles and the late David Koch and their
Koch Industries an estimated $1 to $1.4 billion a year, not even counting their
tax savings on profits stored offshore and a shrunken estate tax.
The Kochs and their affiliated groups spent some $20 million lobbying for the Trump tax cut, including political donations. Not a bad return on investment.
The Kochs and their affiliated groups spent some $20 million lobbying for the Trump tax cut, including political donations. Not a bad return on investment.
If
we had tough anti-corruption laws preventing political payoffs, the Kochs and
other high-rollers wouldn’t get the special tax breaks and other subsidies that
have enlarged their fortunes.
The
fourth way to make a billion is to extort big investors.
Adam
Neumann conned JP Morgan, SoftBank, and other investors to sink hundreds of
millions into WeWork, an office-sharing startup. Neumann used some of the money
to buy buildings he leased back to WeWork and to enjoy a lifestyle that
included a $60 million private jet. WeWork never made a nickel of profit.
A
few months ago, after Neumann was forced to disclose his personal conflicts of
interest, WeWork’s initial public offering fell apart and the company’s
estimated value plummeted. To salvage what they could, investors paid him over
$1 billion to exit the board and give up his voting rights.
Most other WeWork employees were left holdingnear-worthless stock options. Thousands were set to be laid off.
Most other WeWork employees were left holdingnear-worthless stock options. Thousands were set to be laid off.
If
we had tougher anti-fraud laws, Neumann and others like him wouldn’t be
billionaires.
The
fifth way to be a billionaire is to get the money from rich parents or
relatives.
About 60 percent of all the wealth in America today is inherited,
according to estimates by economist Thomas Piketty and his colleagues.
That’s because, under U.S. tax law – which is itself largely a product of lobbying by the wealthy – the capital gains of one generation are wiped out when those assets are transferred to the next, and the estate tax is so tiny that fewer than 0.2 percent of estates were subject to it last year.
That’s because, under U.S. tax law – which is itself largely a product of lobbying by the wealthy – the capital gains of one generation are wiped out when those assets are transferred to the next, and the estate tax is so tiny that fewer than 0.2 percent of estates were subject to it last year.
If
unearned income were treated the same as earned income under the tax code,
America’s non-working rich wouldn’t be billionaires. And if capital gains
weren’t eliminated at death, many heirs wouldn’t be, either.
Capitalism
doesn’t work well with monopolies, insider-trading, political payoffs, fraud, and
large amounts of inherited wealth. Billionaires who don’t like Sanders’s and
Warren’s wealth tax should at least support reforms that end these
anti-capitalist advantages.
Robert
B. Reich is Chancellor's Professor of Public Policy at the University of California
at Berkeley and Senior Fellow at the Blum Center for Developing Economies. He
served as Secretary of Labor in the Clinton administration, for which Time
Magazine named him one of the ten most effective cabinet secretaries of the
twentieth century. He has written fifteen books, including the best sellers
"Aftershock", "The Work of Nations," and "Beyond
Outrage," and, his most recent, "The Common Good," which is
available in bookstores now. He is also a founding editor of the American
Prospect magazine, chairman of Common Cause, a member of the American Academy
of Arts and Sciences, and co-creator of the award-winning documentary,
"Inequality For All." He's co-creator of the Netflix original
documentary "Saving Capitalism," which is streaming now.