To get the discussion back to capitalism...
Warren Buffet, finally a rich guy who has said something sensible.
Serene in his 80 years and also by his 53 billion dollars, Buffet, the third richest man on the planet, has announced that he has always paid too little taxes. Oh My!
Never has the IRS found in the 64,000 pages of fiscal documentation on Buffet even the slightest error, in what has been a Robin Hood scenario turned upside-down: the government makes those with too little pay too much and those with too much pay too little.
At a millionaires dinner to the cost of $4500 a person, just to hear who the Wall Street Journal calls the "Oracle of Omaha," Buffet announced: "Does it seem right that I will pay 17% taxes on earnings of 46,000,000 dollars for 2010, while my secretary pays 30% taxes on her 60,000 dollars earned."
With his wallet and a half century of investments behind him (beginning in 1962 with his first investment in the shirt manufacturer, Berkshire Hathway) and having always paid what was asked, Buffet speaks, therefore, with considerable authority. He can permit himself, consequently, to challenge the millionaire's and billionaire's philosophical orthodoxy that has also been implanted in the State's fiscal thinking since the 80's (and of which they still must try to keep a straight face today, especially after the Wall Street debacle, when preaching to the masses): namely, that reducing the taxes on the income of the rich helps the less fortunate. The so called "trickle down" theory espoused first by Reaganomics and faithfully maintained by Allen Greenspan during the following decades. Yet, as Buffet notes, the statistics on the distribution of wealth today have demonstrated that, since then, there is a frightfully growing gap in America between the haves and the have-nots. Since Reaganomics became dogma in the 80's the rich have gotten richer, while the middle and lower classes poorer: given that today 1% of Americans earn 24% of the nation's earnings - an all time record.
Buffet's thoughts, therefore, coincide with those of Harvard economist John Kenneth Galbraith's, who invites the rich to be more generous. This is not for the goodness of their souls, but as Galbraith cynically repeats: "I the rich guy sleep more tranquilly, if I know that surrounding my castle everybody has enough to eat and a roof over their heads." Well his might not be a very noble sentiment, but I suppose this is better than nothing.
The tax laws, Buffet maintains, are a grotesque joke, for which he that has lots of money can legitimately filter millions without taxation, while he that doesn't have charity foundations, trust funds, fiscal shields pays right down to the last cent. "It would be enough," Buffet claims to impose "a 5% additional tax on couples with earnings of $ 400,000 per year and up to finance social programs to help the less well-off, without significantly reducing the spendable income of the rich."
However Buffet still applauds the detested Washington government for its rapid intervention with Wall Street, which is precisely the reason why Obama's government received such a thrashing at the midterm elections. A government which was also accused by the most crazy of conservatives and schizophrenic of liberals alike with "stalinism."
Source: Vittorio Zucconi, la Repubblica (23, Nov. 2010)