Massachusetts, the former colony that hated taxes so much it led the rebellion against England, has a new state tax that shows just what’s possible when the wealthy are made to pay their fair share. The Boston Globe reported this week that the Fair Share Amendment, also known as the “millionaires’ tax,” had exceeded the amount it was projected to raise for the current fiscal year — by a lot. State lawmakers had budgeted $1 billion in spending from the new revenue. As of Monday, the 4% surtax on annual income over $1 million had raised $1.8 billion, and there are another two months to go before the fiscal year ends.
For those of you who aren’t great at math, the numbers mean there’s already an $800 million surplus from the first year of the tax alone. Lawmakers stipulated that the surplus be put aside in a specified reserve account that can be used for one-time investments into initiatives that may include education programs and new transportation projects. It’s a smart idea, not only to help silence critics who predicted the money would be blown immediately on shortsighted schemes, but also to guarantee that the new funding stream is sustainable before it’s relied on too heavily.
The early success of the new tax — which voters approved in a 2022 ballot initiative — is heartening for people who think the wealthy should help their communities prosper.
The early success of the new tax — which voters approved in a 2022 ballot initiative — is heartening for people who think the wealthy should help their communities prosper. But there’ve been few opportunities to show what happens when the wealthy are taxed more given the conservative fetish for cutting taxes on the rich over the last few decades. Starting in 2018, for the first time in the country’s history, billionaires paid a lower effective tax rate than working-class Americans.
Not only did the massive tax cuts lead to calls to cut government services, that lack of revenue has helped blow a big hole in the federal deficit and expanded the total debt the U.S. owes. That, in turn, has prompted demands for more budget cuts from Republicans who only seem to remember they dislike deficits when a Democrat is in the White House. President Joe Biden has pledged instead to focus on bringing more money into the Treasury, in part by raising taxes on businesses and imposing a 25% minimum income tax on billionaires. As you can imagine, none of those plans has exactly gone over well with Republicans who want to see former President Donald Trump keep the gravy train rolling for the rich.
But the few steps that Biden has managed put into place to get the wealthy to pay up are already paying dividends. The IRS announced earlier this year that it had collected more than half a billion dollars in back taxes from millionaires, thanks in large part to increased capability that a boost in funding has provided. More are scrambling to get their financial houses in order as the odds of being audited are higher, with the newly muscular agency starting to warn wealthy individuals who haven’t filed their returns to pay up.








