Millionaires at the World Economic Forum are demanding higher taxes: Don Pittis - Action News
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Millionaires at the World Economic Forum are demanding higher taxes: Don Pittis

Patriotic Millionaires, an exclusive U.S. club that also includes billionaires, released a letter at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, demanding elites add their names to a new plan to make the world a better place through tax reform.

To fight inequality, letter urges elites to demand worldwide tax reform

The world's rich must beware of the pitchforks, says a letter released in Davos yesterday where demonstrators protested against the 50th World Economic Forum annual meeting. (Arnd Wiegmann/Reuters)

A group of rich people from the United States want governmentsto raise their taxes.

Yesterday, Patriotic Millionaires, the exclusive U.S. club that also includes billionaires, released a letter at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, demanding that the global richadd their names to a new plan to make the world a better place through global tax reform.

If you own a house in Vancouver or Toronto and are considering signing onyou may not be rich enough. Membership requires a minimumannual income of a million U.S. dollarsor assets of five million.

So far, there is no indication that the world's rich are lining up to follow the group's prescriptionfor a crackdown on tax havens and tax avoidance through reforms to international laws.
The membership list so far includes 121 wealthy people, but sincethe U.S. alone has something in the order of600 billionaires, current signatories are dwarfed by manymore who aren't interested in joining.

The Davos letter addressed to "Our Fellow Millionaires and Billionaires Across the Globe," appears to be just the latest move to draw media attention to the idea that at least some of the world's richest people think the growing gap between rich and pooris aproblem. The PR move, however, has not garnered much coverage in the world's billionaire-owned media.

Though it may seem like a lot to a working stiff, $5 million in assets is not extraordinary in a world so starkly divided between rich and poor. There are many such rich people, including among our elected officials, who might not want to sign on but would still agree with many of the ideas expressed in yesterday's letter.

Certainly, governments worried about lost tax revenuehave repeatedly struggled to deviseglobal plans to prevent corporations and wealthy individuals from hiding their money offshorewith limited success.

Destabilizing inequality

"Extreme, destabilizing inequality is growing across the globe," says the letterreleased in Davos. "Despite vocal protests to the contrary, most reasonable people understand thatphilanthropy has always been, and always will be, an inadequate substitute for government investment."

The statementseemed to echo an appeal by academic and author Rutger Bregman, a speaker at last year's Davos meeting, who went rogue and declared that talking about poverty without mentioning taxes was like a going to a firefighter's meeting where they refused to talk about water. He wasn't invited back.

Like Bregman, signatories to the new lettersay extreme inequality is drivingthe world toward a crisis point. In fact, they warn the rich of a potential uprising bythe poorer classes.Thethreat of revolution, they warn, creates a tradeoff between "those who prefer taxes and those who prefer pitchforks."

U.S. President Donald Trump spoke at this year's World Economic Forum. Many of his wealthy donors welcomed his tax cuts that helped the rich get richer. (Jonathan Ernst/Reuters)

As the shortage of signatures on the document may show, ifa popular uprising to overthrow the rich is brewing, elites believe they can handle it.

All around the world, including in Canada, Britain and the United States, political parties that favour tax cuts and leaving tax havens alone get the vast majority of financial support from donors.

Rather than sign documents to raise their taxes, even the moderately rich oftenvote with their wallets to make sure taxes stay low.

Money well spent

Those donations, often used for campaign advertising, representmoney well spent. In the United States, the populist Trump garnerssupport from many poorvoters who believe they are opposinggovernment elites; many of the less well off seem willing to vote against their own best interests.

In the U.S., lower middle class and poorTrump supporters effectively voted against their own medical coverage.

In Canada, there are caseswhere people earning basic income voted for the party that promised to cancel it and where people violently opposed inheritance taxes, even though they would be far too poor to be affected.

Opponents of pro-tax campaigns often suggest that those who want to pay higher taxes should do so, but of course that would just make the shirkers richer in relative terms.

Yesterday's letter is unlikely to be more successful than previous campaigns, including a 2019 effort by the self-described Patriotic Millionaires to persuade government to raise taxes on the rich in New York.

Waiting for the pitchforks

At that time, Patriotic Millionaire memberAbagail Disney, heir to part of the Disney fortune and a well known advocate of progressive causes, was backing the tax increase.

"New York will always be New York," she said. "There's no other place like it, and millionaires are concentrated here because of that."

New York Gov.Andrew Cuomo, a Democrat whose state budget faced a deficit, threatened to move himself to Florida if the tax hike was introducedand the campaign appeared to fizzleout.

Polls of people across the global wealth spectrum,including U.S. viewers of Fox Television, have shown a majority would like to see higher taxes on the rich. Many of the world's richest people, including Microsoft founder Bill Gates and financier Warren Buffet, have complained that the tax system isunfair.

But until people are willing to elect governments that promise to raise taxes, changes are unlikely.

Despite a widening gap between the richest and everyone else, there are few signs of people sharpening their pitchforks.

Follow Don on Twitter @don_pittis