Elizabeth Warren's best and worst economic ideas

She’s running for president, but Elizabeth Warren may already be the nation’s wonk-in-chief.

“I have a plan for that,” Warren famously declares on the campaign trail when voters ask about struggling farmers or unaffordable child care or shoddy military housing. And she really does. Her detailed policy ideas seem to be working: some polls now place the Democratic senator from Massachusetts in second place among 23 Democrats, behind only Joe Biden.

Yahoo Finance tallied 26 discrete policy plans Warren has fleshed out on her website, in speeches and in legislation she’s backing. Half relate to business and economic issues. Warren insists she’s a capitalist, yet she favors aggressive new ways to redistribute wealth, a heavy government role in the economy and other policies relatively close to the “democratic socialism” of Bernie Sanders.

Still, Warren’s ideas are framing much of the policy discussion in the 2020 campaign, to the extent there is any policy discussion this early in the race. So Yahoo Finance is grading 13 of Elizabeth Warren’s economic policy ideas, from A to F, with emphasis on workability, relevance and likely effectiveness.

The “real corporate profits tax.” Grade: B. Warren would impose a 7% tax on all corporate profits above $100 million, to raise money for other programs. She argues this is more effective than simply raising the corporate tax rate because of all the loopholes that allow big companies to evade taxes. She’s right about that. The best tax rates are the lowest ones necessary to fund the government voters want. With annual deficits approaching $1 trillion, somebody’s taxes are too low. The Trump tax cuts of 2017 cut the business tax rate by 40%, which was probably too much. Most voters would be fine with a tax hike targeting big companies that have benefited the most from globalization.

The “ultramillionaire tax.” D. Voters might also be fine with higher taxes on multimillionaires, except this tax would be a nightmare to enforce. Warren wants to impose a 2% annual tax on net worth above $50 million, and a 3% tax on wealth above $1 billion. The problem with this is determining a wealthy family’s net worth, especially with illiquid assets such as real estate, art and collectibles. Plus, imagine the clever wealth shifting such a law would incite. Better, probably, to raise other taxes such as those on capital gains or income above $250,000.

Graphic by David Foster
Graphic by David Foster

“Economic patriotism.” C. This plan is a grab-bag of ideas for using the power of the federal government to “defend and create” American jobs. Some parts make sense, such as replacing the Commerce Department and other outdated agencies with a new Department of Economic Development that would foster industrial policy similar to what Germany and Japan do. Warren would use Uncle Sam’s purchasing power to develop and sustain key industries. One dubious element is a scheme for “more actively managing our currency” to promote exports—in other words, keeping the dollar artificially weak. Government-sponsored currency manipulation: what could go wrong?