PAN AFRICAN VISIONSPAN AFRICAN VISIONSPAN AFRICAN VISIONS
Font ResizerAa
  • Home
  • Politics
    PoliticsShow More
    Africa’s Voice Abroad, Silence at Home: The Growing Credibility Crisis of the African Union

    By Adonis Byemelwa The statement appeared routine at first glance. The African…

    By
    Pan African Visions
    Sierra Leone’s APC Supporters Urged to Keep Calm Amid Internal Elections

    By Ishmael Sallieu Koroma FREETOWN — As internal elections unfold within Sierra…

    By
    Pan African Visions
    Africa’s Fragmented Voices in a World Pulled Apart by the US and Iran

    By Amb. Godfrey Madanhire* The war between the United States and Iran…

    By
    Pan African Visions
    Macky Sall’s UN Bid Is a High-Stakes Test of Power, Principle and the Veto System

    By Adonis Byemelwa Macky Sall's intention to run for Antonio Guterres's job…

    By
    Pan African Visions
    US Sanctions Rwanda’s Army Over DRC Conflict; Kigali Calls Move ‘One-Sided’

    By Jean-Pierre A The United States Department of the Treasury has sanctioned…

    By
    Pan African Visions
  • Business
    BusinessShow More
    Africa & the Iran War : What The Oil-Price Shock And Shipping Disruptions Mean For Economies, Fuel & Food Supply Chains, Budgets, Trade Finance, Market Access, Liquidity, Inflation And The Cost Of Living

    By Rene Awambeng, Senior Executive Officer, Premier Invest* With Brent spiking toward…

    By
    Pan African Visions
    Frontier’s Partnership With TECSEP Fails to Silence African Energy Chamber Protest

    By Samuel Ouma The Africa Energies Summit is facing mounting scrutiny following…

    By
    Pan African Visions
    African Iron Ore: Driving Industrialization, Investment and Regional Growth

    -African Mining Week 2026 will showcase investment and lucrative prospects within Africa’s…

    By
    Pan African Visions
    African Energy Chamber Calls for Boycott of London’s Africa Energies Summit Over Alleged Hiring Discrimination

    By Ajong Mbapndah L The Executive Chairman of the African Energy Chamber,…

    By
    Pan African Visions
    African Energy Chamber Amplifies Diversity Fight in Africa’s Energy Sector

    By Ajong Mbapndah L As Africa’s oil and gas sector gathers unprecedented…

    By
    Pan African Visions
  • Health
  • Sport
    SportShow More
    CAS Dismisses SYNAFOC Appeal in Dispute With Cameroon Football Federation

    By Boris Esono Nwenfor BUEA, PAV – The legal battle between the…

    By
    Pan African Visions
    Ambassador Ibrahima Touré Highlights Côte d’Ivoire’s Sporting Rise at Atlantic Council Dialogue

    By Ajong Mbapndah L WASHINGTON, D.C. — March 10, 2026.His Excellency Ibrahima…

    By
    Pan African Visions
    Francis Ngannou and Professional Fighters League Part Ways After Two-Year Partnership

    By Boris Esono Nwenfor The Professional Fighters League and Cameroonian mixed martial…

    By
    Pan African Visions
    CAF Shifts 2026 Women’s AFCON to July–August

    By Ngunyi Sonita Nwohtazie BUEA, PAV – The Confederation of African Football…

    By
    Pan African Visions
    Cameroon : Indomitable Lions Set for Crucial FIFA Series 2026 Fixtures in Oceania

    By Boris Esono Nwenfor BUEA, PAV – The Cameroon national football team…

    By
    Pan African Visions
  • Multimedia
    • Sports
    • Documentaries
    • Comedy
    • Music
    • Interviews
  • APO/PAV
  • AMA/PAV
    AMA/PAVShow More
    U.S. Embassy Pretoria Celebrates Mandela Day at Zola Community Health Center in Soweto

    PRETORIA, South Africa, July 22, 2019,-/African Media Agency (AMA)/- To honor Nelson Mandela’s…

    By
    Pan African Visions
    Zimbabwe: Droughts leave millions food insecure, UN food agency scales up assistance

    Severe drought has rendered more than a third of rural households in…

    By
    Pan African Visions
    Mozambique: Opposition candidate facing pre-election death threats and intimidation

    GENEVA, Switzerland, July 19, 2019,-/African Media Agency (AMA)/- The main opposition candidate in…

    By
    Pan African Visions
    The END Fund – Making everyday a Mandela Day

    JOHANNESBURG, South Africa, July 18th 2019,-/African Media Agency/- 2018 was a true landmark…

    By
    Pan African Visions
    Innovation leaders gather in Nairobi to unpack Intelligent Enterprise opportunities at SAP Innovation Day.

    NAIROBI, Kenya , July 18, 2019 -/African Media Agency (AMA)/- About 600…

    By
    Pan African Visions
  • Media OutReach
    Media OutReachShow More
    Vingroup Introduces Special Program to Support Customers Amid Rising Fuel Costs

    HANOI, VIETNAM - Media OutReach Newswire - 10 March 2026 - Amid…

    By
    Pan African Visions
    Singapore University of Social Sciences Expands Regional Footprint in China with Launch of Success Academy in Chongqing

    New Academy and Shenyang satellite office strengthen SUSS’ visibility and partnerships across…

    By
    Pan African Visions
    CK Life Sciences Establishes Sequencio Therapeutics to Advance Therapeutic Cancer Vaccines Development

    HONG KONG SAR - Media OutReach Newswire - 10 March 2026 -…

    By
    Pan African Visions
    Yi Yun Movers Rethinks Operations as Moving Industry Evolves

    SINGAPORE - Media OutReach Newswire - 10 March 2026 - Yi Yun…

    By
    Pan African Visions
    Cigna Healthcare Hong Kong Launches Health Moves Community Initiatives in Third Year of HYROX Partnership

    New programs aim to boost active living and community engagement across Hong…

    By
    Pan African Visions
  • Blogs
    • African Show Biz
    • Insights Africa
    • Cumaland Diary
    • Kamer Blues
    • Nigerian Round Up
    • Ugandan Titbits
    • African View Points
    • Global Africa
  • Magazines
Search
  • Global Africa
  • Interviews
  • Politics
  • Sports
  • African Newsmakers
  • African View Points
  • Development
  • Discoveries
  • Education
© 2026. Pan African Visions. All Rights Reserved.
Reading: Regressive Taxation Must Be Reversed
Font ResizerAa
PAN AFRICAN VISIONSPAN AFRICAN VISIONS
  • Politics
  • Business in Africa
  • Blog
  • Health
  • Sports
  • Entertainment
  • Multimedia
  • Contact
Search
  • Home
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Health
  • Sport
  • Multimedia
    • Sports
    • Documentaries
    • Comedy
    • Music
    • Interviews
  • APO/PAV
  • AMA/PAV
  • Media OutReach
  • Blogs
    • African Show Biz
    • Insights Africa
    • Cumaland Diary
    • Kamer Blues
    • Nigerian Round Up
    • Ugandan Titbits
    • African View Points
    • Global Africa
  • Magazines
Have an existing account? Sign In
Follow US
© 2025 Pan African Visions.  All Rights Reserved.
PAN AFRICAN VISIONS > Blog > AMA > Regressive Taxation Must Be Reversed
AMAUncategorized

Regressive Taxation Must Be Reversed

Last updated: September 8, 2020 6:30 pm
Pan African Visions
Share
SHARE

By Jomo Kwame Sundaram
KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia, Sep 8 2020 (IPS)

With many in the world experiencing declining living standards, there has been growing frustration. Many hope that progressive taxation will improve things. While some economies once had progressive tax systems, recent decades have seen regression.

Competing, contradictory trends
Triumph of Injustice, the recent book by Emmanuel Saez and Gabriel Zucman, both associates of ‘rock-star’ economist Thomas Piketty, calls for a US return to progressive taxation. The duo show that the US had one of the world’s most progressive tax systems, but now, the richest pay a lower tax rate than the poorest.

Jomo Kwame Sundaram

The two French economists at Berkeley consider the two major competing US ideologies on taxation based on rival claims with contemporary echoes. The socially regressive, ostensibly libertarian tradition has its roots in property, including slaves, who once accounted for 40% of the population of the US South.

Plantation owners and slaveholders opposed property taxes in the name of freedom and liberty. Meanwhile, the myth of the wealthy that low taxes have long been part of US history and tradition has become far more influential.

Another more progressive tax ideology can be traced to more egalitarian traditions, including some involving wealth taxation. The US has actually had some of the highest tax rates on the rich in world history, as taxation became more progressive from the 1930s, especially after the Second World War.

Regressive turn
Those most responsible for the U-turn from the 1980s have been US Presidents Ronald Reagan and Donald Trump. The authors attribute the great recent increase in US economic inequality to the “negative spiral” involving regressive tax reforms over the last four decades.

However, empirical support for their claim is suspect as the ‘primary’ distribution of income before taxation is hardly egalitarian. Besides the traditional division between capital and labour, rentier incomes and much higher executive remuneration have become far more significant in recent decades.

While regressive tax incidence has undoubtedly made things worse, exaggerating the fiscal system’s redistributive impact detracts from a more comprehensive understanding of contemporary inequality.

Avoidance and evasion
Successive US governments have also enabled tax evasion and avoidance by not investing enough to effectively enforce what remains of the US tax code. These have been portrayed by beneficiaries and their propagandists as ‘unavoidable’.

They then claim that the best option to ensure greater compliance is to lower ‘headline’ tax rates. Thus, instead of greater efforts to reduce tax avoidance and evasion, they urge further reduction of tax rates.

Saez and Zucman insist that governments, especially the world’s most powerful one in Washington, DC, must come down hard on tax dodgers, pointing out that not doing so is due to political choices made. They propose a Federal Protection Bureau to enhance capacity against tax evasion and avoidance.

Corporate taxation
The duo show that corporate taxes were crucial in narrowing the gap between rich and poor during the Keynesian Golden Age for a quarter century or so in the mid-20th century after World War Two.

While very high top personal income tax rates, and much more inheritance and property taxes can help, they show that corporate taxation was crucial. The corporate income tax rate then was 50%, taking half of firm profits.

The high tax rate also encouraged re-investing profits, rather than paying dividends and bonuses, encouraging firm growth with higher capital accumulation in the long-term.

Meanwhile, progressive government expenditure complemented progressive taxation, including more direct taxes, for a comprehensively progressive fiscal system, reducing overall economic inequality.

Proposals to reduce inequalities
Saez and Zucman persuasively offer a comprehensive set of proposals to reverse the downward spiral to rebuild a much more progressive US tax system, with many lessons very relevant elsewhere as well. Importantly, they discuss various options for the US, including many not requiring international cooperation.

They acknowledge that the US has already shown the way with its Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act (FATCA). FATCA compels all US citizens, both at home and abroad, to file annual reports on all their foreign holdings, ensuring greater financial transparency in the age of globalization.

Nevertheless, they insist it is not enough, arguing that “when it comes to regulating the tax industry, the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) brings a knife to a gunfight”, instead of enhancing US tax capacities and capabilities.

‘Tax all incomes equally’
The first principle of taxation for them is that all income should be taxed equally, whether from work or assets. Today, capital income is taxed much less than labour income, increasing inequality contrary to the popular presumption that taxation is progressively redistributive.

Saez and Zucman also show that the rich can afford to pay 4% of national income, or US$750 billion more in tax. Four sets of taxes would double their current average tax rate from 30% to 60%.

They propose a steeply progressive income tax, arguing that a top rate of 75% is most viable. The duo also recommend strongly enforced corporate tax, doubling inheritance tax revenues, and introducing a wealth tax.

Wealth tax necessary
The duo also insist that it will be impossible to reduce inequality in the contemporary world only by raising corporate, inheritance and income taxes, as important as these are to the overall effort.

At the rates recommended, a wealth tax would raise significant sums, but still would not radically reduce inequality or extreme wealth concentration. Hence, the authors argue for higher rates, not only to raise more government revenue, but also to reduce extreme wealth inequality and concentration.

Saez and Zucman argue that extreme wealth concentration has led to growth benefits being captured by a few. They argue for taxing the rich, not only to enhance revenue, but also to reduce extreme wealth concentration.

For them, “a radical wealth tax would lead to a reduction in the number of multibillionaires. More than collecting revenue, it would deconcentrate wealth”. They suggest a 10% rate on fortunes over US$1 billion.

This would not only make it harder to be a billionaire, but also much harder to become and remain a multi-billionaire. If their proposed wealth tax was in place from 1982, most of the 400 richest Americans would still be billionaires, but worth much less.

Their wealth shares would be closer to what they were in 1982, before the rapid rise of wealth inequality. Mark Zuckerberg would still have US$21 billion, instead of US$61 billion, while Bill Gates would be worth US$4 billion, instead of US$97 billion.

Inequalities linked
Under President Franklin Delano Roosevelt in the 1930s, an income tax top rate of 94% was introduced, apparently not to raise revenue, but rather, to limit high incomes and wealth concentration.

This effectively limited income differentials between the highest and lowest paid to far more reasonable levels. As top tax rates have drastically fallen since, executives now get several hundred times more than their lowest paid employees.

In a recent interview, Gates commented, “I’m all for super-progressive tax systems…I’ve paid over $10bn in taxes. I’ve paid more than anyone in taxes. If I had to pay $20bn, it’s fine. But when you say I should pay $100bn, then I’m starting to do a little math about what I have left over.”

The post Regressive Taxation Must Be Reversed appeared first on Inter Press Service.

Source : African Media Agency (AMA)

Share This Article
LinkedIn Email Copy Link Print
Previous Article Nobel Laureate Kailash Satyarthi on Where to Find the $1 trillion Needed for Marginalised Children
Next Article Financing Economic Recovery
Leave a Comment

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Your Trusted Source for Accurate and Timely Updates!

Our commitment to accuracy, impartiality, and delivering breaking news as it happens has earned us the trust of a vast audience. Stay ahead with real-time updates on the latest events, trends.
FacebookLike
XFollow
InstagramFollow
LinkedInFollow
Diestmann

You Might Also Like

UN peacekeepers go on trial for CAR sex abuse

By
Pan African Visions

Coronavirus: African Union Member States reporting COVID-19 cases as of 3 July 2020, 6 pm EAT

By
Pan African Visions

Covid-19 en RDC : 117 nouveaux cas, 1 décès et 26 guéris dimanche

By
Pan African Visions

Crédit du Maroc muscle son jeu

By
Pan African Visions
PAN AFRICAN VISIONS
Facebook Twitter Youtube Rss Medium

About US


Pan African Visions: Your instant connection to breaking stories and live updates. Stay informed with our real-time coverage across politics, tech, entertainment, and more. Your reliable source for 24/7 news.

  • 7614 Green Willow Court, Hyattsville, MD 20785 , USA
  • +1 24 0429 2177
  • pav@panafricanvisions.com
Top Categories
  • Politics
  • Business in Africa
  • Blog
  • Health
  • Sports
  • Entertainment
  • Multimedia
  • Contact
Usefull Links
  • PAV – Home
  • Contact Us
  • About Us
  • Complaint
  • Advertise With Us

© 2025 Pan African Visions. 
All Rights Reserved.