Tuesday, October 25, 2022
Raskolnikov Presents Should Only the Richest Pay More? Today At NYU
Alex Raskolnikov (Columbia) presents Should Only the Richest Pay More? (reviewed by David Elkins (Netanya, visiting NYU 2021-2023; Google Scholar) here) at NYU today as part of its Tax Policy and Public Finance Colloquium hosted by Daniel Shaviro:
This paper challenges the leading academic, political, and cultural narrative supporting greater redistribution. The narrative holds that redistribution should come at the expense of a very restricted group of the highest earners: the one percent, the super-rich, the billionaire class. I argue that many reasons offered in support of this view call for redistribution from a much broader group that includes the affluent—those with incomes in the ninetieth to ninety-ninth percentiles of the distribution. Whether one looks at the recent trends in income concentration, wealth concentration, social mobility, political representation, or the rise of populism, the affluent are as great—and sometimes greater—contributors to these problems as those in the top one percent. Remarkably, contemporary legal scholarship has ignored the affluent almost completely, greatly limiting the magnitude of possible economic transfers as well the forms that these transfers may take.
This paper reveals the analytical weakness of the prevailing narrow view. Higher taxes on the affluent should fully enter distributional debates.
https://taxprof.typepad.com/taxprof_blog/2022/10/raskolnikov-presents-should-only-the-richest-pay-more-today-at-nyu.html