That level of concentration historically correlates with lower mobility and instability.
They’re taxed less than you think: Billionaires often pay lower effective tax rates than middle-class workers because most of their income is capital gains, not wages.
Higher taxes used to work: From the 1940s–1970s, top marginal tax rates were 70–90%, yet the U.S. saw strong growth, rising wages, and massive infrastructure expansion.
Raising taxes doesn’t kill growth: OECD and IMF research shows moderate increases in taxes on high earners do not reduce economic growth, especially when funds go to education, healthcare, and infrastructure.
Public investment pays off: Every $1 spent on infrastructure and education returns more than $1 in long-term economic growth through higher productivity and earnings.
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