Bill gates
"I've been disproportionately rewarded for the work I've done," the billionaire Microsoft cofounder and philanthropist said in a blog post titled "What I'm thinking about this New Year's Eve."
"The rich should pay more than they currently do, and that includes Melinda and me," Gates added, referring to his wife, who with him founded the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.
"We've updated our tax system before to keep up with changing times, and we need to do it again, starting with raising taxes on people like me," he said. The taxes should be spent smartly to "build a healthier, more equitable world for all," he added.
Gates is worth about $113 billion, making him the world's second-richest person behind Amazon's Jeff Bezos, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index.
Gates' arguments for higher taxes on the rich:
Gates tackled several common criticisms of higher taxes in his blog post too.
Related video: How Bill Gates and Warren Buffett are changing the world
Click to expand
UP NEXT
Van carrying college rowing team crashes, killing 1
Grace Rett was killed and at least 12 others were injured when the vehicle carrying the College of the Holy Cross women's team hit a truck.
Former Obama adviser: No evidence Democrats can defeat Trump
Reaction and analysis from attorney Ethan Bearman and Trump legal adviser Harmeet Dhillon.
Cuomo: No one hides an alibi, but they do hide trouble
CNN's Chris Cuomo discusses if it's possible to conduct a fair trial without any witnesses as President Donald Trump's Senate impeachment trial begins.
UP NEXT
Voluntary taxes
The Microsoft and Berkshire Hathaway director addressed the frequent response to billionaires such as himself and Warren Buffett calling for higher taxes: They can pay more than required by law if they so wish.
"Simply leaving it up to people to give more than the government asks for is not a scalable solution," Gates said. "People pay taxes as an obligation of law and citizenship, not out of charity. Additional voluntary giving will never raise enough money for everything the government needs to do."
Philanthropy
Unsurprisingly, the world's best-known philanthropist defended private-sector giving.
"There's value to society in allowing the wealthy to put some money into private foundations, because foundations play an irreplaceable role that's distinct from what governments do well," Gates said.
He gave the example of high-risk initiatives, such as his foundation's experimentation with new ways to eradicate malaria.
"If a government tries an idea for improving global health that fails, someone wasn't doing their job," he said. "Whereas if we don't try some ideas that fail, we're not doing our jobs."
Enterprise
Finally, Gates addressed concerns that raising taxes would discourage entrepreneurship and innovation by cutting their rewards. He argued those weren't real worries at current tax rates.
"We shouldn't destroy those incentives, but we're a long way from that point now," he said. "Americans in the top 1% can afford to pay a lot more before they stop going to work or creating jobs."
Gates pointed out that higher taxes didn't dissuade him from founding and building a business.
"In the 1970s, when Paul Allen and I were starting Microsoft, marginal tax rates were almost twice the top rate today," he wrote. "It didn't hurt our incentive to build a great company."
No comments:
Post a Comment
Thank you for comments