The wealth tax can work because it’s ‘something we are already doing’ when people die: Rep. Jayapal

On Monday, three lawmakers – Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D., Mass.), Rep. Pramila Jayapal (D., Wash.), and Rep. Brendan Boyle (D., Pa.) – introduced a bill to impose an annual Ultra-Millionaire Tax on the richest Americans.

Warren pitched the idea for a wealth tax when she ran for president, And one frequent criticism of such a plan was how hard it would be to enforce, primarily because assets like privately owned businesses, real estate that’s not for sale, and art – unlike stocks – are difficult to value.

That’s a solvable problem, argued Jayapal told Yahoo Finance Live.

The proposal is focused on “a structural problem with our tax code for a long time,” she said, noting that “we really don't tax the rest of wealth until you die.”

Jayapal said the way we tax estates currently shows a wealth tax is possible. “It actually is something we are already doing,” she said. “When people die, we value their net worth and their estates – we just do it at death.”

The proposal would impose an annual tax of 2% on the net worth of households and trusts between $50 million and $1 billion. For those with a net worth above $1 billion, the annual tax rate would jump to 3%. To tout the proposal, the lawmakers released an analysis by the University of California, Berkeley that found the tax – which would impact just 100,000 American families or 0.05% of the population – is estimated to generate $3 trillion in tax revenue over the next 10 years.

‘It's very difficult’

Not everyone is so sure the estate tax is a good model to follow.

Erica York, an economist with the Tax Foundation, recently noted to Yahoo Money that “currently, the IRS has to process about 4,000 estate tax returns a year and it's very difficult.”

The problem is that “some of these assets aren't aren't traded publicly, so there's not a straightforward way to see how much they're worth like there is with a stock.” She noted that assets like artwork are already difficult to assess upon death.

One of Jayapal’s Democratic colleagues, Rep. Don Beyer of Virginia, was raised concerns about people hiding from a wealth tax as well as the question of whether the proposal is constitutional.

“I'm trying to take my lead from President Biden,” he said, noting that the president has “been looking at corporate tax rates, buybacks, things like that, rather than wealth tax.”

In announcing the tax, Warren noted that richest Americans often pay a lower effective tax rate than less well-off Americans. “A wealth tax is popular among voters on both sides for good reason: because they understand the system is rigged to benefit the wealthy and large corporations," said Warren.