Warren Buffett's recent column focused mostly on the "sources of government revenue" and the income taxes collected from the "super-rich," which he suggests should be immediately increased with higher rates on incomes above $1 million to reduce the national debt and deficit.
But there's also the other side of the equation - the "uses of government revenue" that Mr. Buffett did not address. The chart above shows "transfer payments as a share of government spending" from 1929 to 2010 (BEA data here), which has doubled from 22% in 1966 to 44% last year. If this trend continues, we might reach a point where no amount of taxation on the rich or super-rich can finance an unsustainable "transfer society." At some point, the mega-rich might just "go Galt."
But there's also the other side of the equation - the "uses of government revenue" that Mr. Buffett did not address. The chart above shows "transfer payments as a share of government spending" from 1929 to 2010 (BEA data here), which has doubled from 22% in 1966 to 44% last year. If this trend continues, we might reach a point where no amount of taxation on the rich or super-rich can finance an unsustainable "transfer society." At some point, the mega-rich might just "go Galt."
Exhibit A: "Controversial Ryanair boss Michael O'Leary has warned that he will leave Ireland and become a tax exile if rates for high earners become exorbitant. "Europe will realize, as they are in the US, that a tiny proportion of the working population supports a ludicrous amount of incentives and feather-bedding for people who don't want to or won't work," he said."
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→Chart of the Day: Transfer Payments
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