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Excerpt: America’s top 1% enjoy a fifth of the economy’s income and pay nearly a third of its federal taxes. Many politicians think they should cough up much more. Zohran Mamdani, New York’s mayor, wants a new 2% city levy on incomes over $1m. Virginia, Rhode Island and Washington state are weighing up similar measures; Californians are likely this year to vote on a “one time” 5% levy on billionaires’ wealth. In Europe, too, there is a similar clamour to target the wealthy. France has seen a popular campaign for a wealth tax. And with Sir Keir Starmer weakened or doomed as prime minister, the left wing of Britain’s Labour Party may implement one of its own. The “Robin Hood” state, which takes from the rich to give to the poor, has obvious appeal. Governments across the developed world are strapped for cash. Budgets are burdened by legacy debts, ageing populations and the need to spend more on defence. But few politicians will countenance raising broad-based taxes at a time when voters, scarred by the high inflation of the early 2020s, are worried about affordability. Booming stockmarkets, meanwhile, have reinforced the idea that inequality is too high. And it always sounds good to say someone else will foot the bill.

  • StinkyFingerItchyBum@lemmy.caOP
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    2 days ago

    The economist’s credibility problems were always bad, but they went super sketchy over the last 10 years. I used to enjoy reading them. Now it’s just a clown show of billionaire penis polishers. They don’t even pretend to have objectivity anymore.

    They are desperate, and its going to get a lot worse.

    • phutatorius@lemmy.zip
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      10 hours ago

      The Economist is weird, since there’s a huge gap between their journalism, which is generally of a very good standard (especially for non-UK news), and their opinion section, which consistently parrots whatever idiocy the Conservative Party is currently spouting, though they do bleat a little when the Tories get too authoritarian (which, especially since Thatcher, they usually do).

    • FuglyDuck@lemmy.world
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      2 days ago

      You can smell the desperation.

      The things, nobody else can get taxed to fix the budget, and nobody is going to cut anything like the military aid for Israel.