Democrats have seized on stagnant wages as the prevailing economic problem of our time—and they say it’s one big reason Democrats aren’t getting more credit for the recovery from voters.
Many of their proposed solutions have focused on the lowest-wage workers, calling for a higher minimum wage and a stronger safety net. But Democrats are now embracing a more full-throated kind of populism, releasing a new tax plan that takes from the richest Americans and Wall Street to help the middle class.
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“Giving working Americans a larger share of the economic pie can make the entire pie grow faster. And even the wealthy can be better off with a smaller slice of a rapidly growing pie,” said Rep. Chris Van Hollen, Democrat of Maryland, unveiling the plan in a speech on Monday.
Under Van Hollen’s new proposal, working Americans earning up to $100,000 would receive a $1,000 tax credit per individual; working couples earning up to $200,000 could receive up to a $2,000 tax credit. The plan also increases tax credits for child-care expenses, creates a new credit that rewards workers who save for retirement, and reduces the so-called “marriage penalty” for dual-income families.
The $1.2 trillion plan would be paid for through new limits on tax deductions for the top 1% of American households, as well as a 0.1% fee on a broad array of financial transactions. In 2015, the top 1% will have $518,000 or more in adjusted gross income, according to the Tax Policy Center.
Such redistribution is only fair given how much wealthy Americans and Wall Street already benefit from the current tax code, said Van Hollen, the top Democrat on the House Budget Committee.
“Our tax code today is stacked in favor of people who make money off of money—and against those who make money off of hard work,” Van Hollen said. The plan would boost broad economic growth for everyone by giving middle-class families more money to spend, he continued. The plan would benefit an estimated 150 million workers nationwide, 100 million from the paycheck tax break alone.
“Working people want not only to hear what leaders think about raising wages and income inequality, but what they’ll do about it. Rep. Van Hollen is doing exactly that,” said AFL-CIO president Richard Trumka.
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Wages for ordinary Americans have been stagnating for decades, well before the current recession, while the incomes of the top earners have soared.
Republicans quickly attacked Van Hollen’s plan as a burdensome tax hike. “Just as the sun rises in the east, Washington Democrats propose another massive tax increase,” said Brendan Buck, a spokesman for House Ways and Means Chair Paul Ryan. “Here in the House our focus is going to be on cleaning up the tax code so that we can lower rates for all taxpayers and help create good-paying jobs, not scaring them off with punitive tax hikes.”
Ryan is hoping to move forward with comprehensive tax overhaul this year to reduce tax rates by simplifying the tax code. But a stand-alone plan like Van Hollen’s would likely make broader tax reform more difficult to pull off. “The more things you’ve added to the tax system, the more you need to offset the revenue losses in reform. In general, a more complicated system is in a sense harder to reform,” said Roberton Williams, a senior fellow at the Tax Policy Center. “It’s always better if you’re going to reform the tax system to do everything at once.”









