Professor Madoff delivers a surgically precise autopsy of the legal mechanisms that sustain modern dynastic wealth. It is a rare, clear-eyed roadmap for structural reform that moves beyond populist rhetoric into actionable policy.
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How To Actually Tax The RichAdded:
I'm going to give you a number which is truly shocking. Um, when the top 1% of Americans had $55 trillion, which is how much they had in 2025, the total amount raised by the estate and gift tax, which is supposed to be a 40% tax on all transfers during life or at death. The total amount raised was $28 billion. Wow. That's 06%. It's nothing.
And it's not because of the exemption amount. It's not because of the lower rate. It's because people are able to avoid the tax altogether. And that's what the problem is. So when people say it doesn't matter if we tax the rich, that is just simply not true.
Today's number five. That's a number of days left until Prop Markets kicks off its live tour in a soldout show in San Francisco. Tickets are still available in Chicago, Los Angeles, and Miami.
Ed, no joke today.
>> No joke. Why is that?
>> Claire was giving me [ __ ] about our guests showing up in 20 minutes, and I just didn't have time to find a offensive yet not too offensive joke.
So, I'm going with our constant self-promotion of the tour.
>> Well, the promotion is very important, especially for all of our Chicago listeners and our Miami listeners. I think we need to pump crypto a little bit if we're going to get all the Miami people to show up uh to the Fillmore. I think that I think that's that's something that we should maybe get into.
We've got 5 days left to pump some altcoins.
Um maybe we could get into some rocket, maybe some Faultcoin. Maybe just keep it simple and stick with Bitcoin.
>> This is just making a whole lot of sense to me.
>> It's all resonating.
>> Yeah. No, this is uh so I told you who I I came up actually this wasn't my idea.
This is who we're going to invite.
Although we're trying to track him down, but I think it'd be great if he said yes. So, if he's listening, uh I think we should have Adam Newman.
>> That's not a bad idea. I I agree. You know, he's actually an incredible speaker and communicator. Everything he says, he just >> Did I tell you my story about Adam Newman?
>> I I don't think so. Not coming to mind.
>> So, I was invited to the JP Morgan Alternative Investments Conference, which is literally one of the I'd kind of second only to Davos in terms of what would happen to the GDP if all of a sudden the earth opened up and swallowed all the people there.
And they have me do my predictions thing. I've done it twice, I think. And then they have me interview somebody.
And the first year I'm up there, I did my predictions thing. And I said, "And now I want to welcome to the stage Adam Newman." And I interviewed him and he went into his whole rap about community and elevating the world's consciousness and everything else he figured out on a wild mushroom trip that thought he could turn into a public company. Uh, so we did this thing and he's he was like wearing no socks. He looks like Jesus.
He's very handsome. He's very compelling. He has a whole rap. And then there was a movie called We Crashed where I played me. No, I didn't play me.
Kelly Alcoin from Billions played me interviewing him. Somebody got a hold of the transcript. And the next year I was invited back and they had me interview some influencer who's come and gone. I don't even remember her name. And at the end of the thing I said I said, "And by the way, you know who the last person I interviewed on the stage was?" And she said, "What?" And the audience went stone cold silent. I said, "Adam Newman." And I guess that was not the right thing to say according to JP Morgan executives.
And I have not been invited back. I have not been invited back. Yeah. I've also been disinvited from another unbelievable gathering that I went to for the first time last year because I've been saying that Elon Musk would lose his case. And I guess the guy who hosts the events, the event is butt buddies with Elon.
>> That's a shame. But you were right. I mean, that's what we learned this week.
You were right.
>> I have that, Ed. So that's that's all that really matters. Yeah. Yeah. I actually I I don't remember the the story itself, but I remember watching it wasn't a movie. It was a show. It was a series.
>> It was Apple. We crashed.
>> Yeah. Exactly. On Apple with Jared.
>> And I remember seeing that scene.
>> Um Yeah. With Kelly O'Ne who played you very very well. That was I believe he was on Billions I want to say.
>> Yeah. Dollar Bill on Billions.
>> I mean he crushed that role. He nailed you.
>> Yeah. He's been he's been on a lot of stuff. I thought he was he played a better me than me. We should have him stand in for you on on this show at some point.
>> You know, I'm all for it cuz I'd like to go buy I'd like to go get tapas right now. Um, >> you got about 15 minutes. Why don't you order some room service? Get yourself a snack.
>> I did. It's sitting here. I'm in this beautiful hotel that feels like some, I don't know, prince or someone lived here and then got beheaded. Um, but yeah, it's beautiful. I haven't been to Lisbon in a while.
>> Very exciting. Well, we're going to learn all about princes in a second with our guest. Uh, but before we do that, I'm just going to reiterate we are heading to LA on the 28th where we will have Ted Sarando, co-CEO of Netflix. He will be our special guest. We'll be in Miami on May 30th. Then in Chicago on June 1st, Governor JB Pritska is joining us on stage. Tickets are still available to that show. Also still available for the Miami show. And then on June 2nd, we're finishing things off in New York City with the one and only Anthony Scaramucci. Uh, I think there might be a couple tickets left in New York City. It might actually be sold out. Either way, go check it out. Go see if they're available. profarketsour.com to secure your tickets. It's going to be a lot of fun. We're going to have a Q&A section at the end. You'll ask some questions. We'll do our song and our dance and we'll have some interesting voices on stage to discuss things with us as well. Very excited.
profarketsour.com.
>> Ed, should we get on with the show?
>> Let's do it. Hey guys, if you haven't already, please subscribe to our ProfG Markets YouTube channel. And if you want to get notifications of our latest episodes, click the bell icon as well.
Thank you. Wealth inequality is reaching a breaking point in this country. The top 1% now command roughly a third of the nation's wealth. Meanwhile, the bottom half of Americans control only 3% and 1 in 10 Americans still live below the federal poverty line. One instrument that might have created this divide is the tax code. There are a number of loopholes in the tax code that have enabled America's wealthiest to increase their wealth. And today, the average American is paying a higher tax rate than the wealthiest 400 people in the country. Meanwhile, audit rates, particularly of the ultra wealthy, have collapsed to a historic low. We've spent some time discussing these issues on the show, but we wanted to bring in someone who has dedicated their career to studying how the tax code shapes inequality and how the wealthiest Americans use it to preserve and to grow their wealth across generations. So, this is our conversation with Ry Matto, professor at Boston College Law School and author of The Second Estate: How the Tax Code Made an American Aristocracy.
Rey, thank you so much for joining us on the show. I'd like to start with a potential rebuttal to your thesis, which in so many words is that the wealthy are not paying enough in taxes compared to the rest of us. Uh, and then we'll get into the conversation. But the rebuttal, the statistic that a lot of people use uh is the fact that the top 1% of Americans pay 40% of the federal tax revenue in America. So if that is true, if the wealthiest are paying most of the taxes, then the first question is what's the problem?
>> First of all, thank you so much for having me. I know that the two of you talk a lot about taxes and it's wonderful to have the chance to join you in conversation on this important topic.
Uh and I am particularly grateful that you have started with that question because I call that the statistic that saves the rich from taxes and we see it being published in lots of publications.
Wall Street Journal, The Economist, the Washington Post has now joined in and the uh and this is a statistic that is both true and highly misleading. And so the way it's described as the top 1% pay 40% of all income taxes. But what they're not saying there is what do they mean by top 1%. What they're actually talking about is the top 1% of income earners. Those with high taxable income, high paid lawyers, bankers, surgeons, anybody with a very high salary. And those people are indeed paying heavy taxes. And however, the problem is that this says nothing about our wealthiest Americans. And that is because our wealthiest Americans avoid income taxes by avoiding taxable income. And as a result, they are just as likely to be in the 40% of Americans who pay no income taxes as they are in the top 1% that pay 40% of income taxes. So the the statistic that that we find quite fascinating here is that Americans pay an average effective tax rate of 30% and then among the 400 wealthiest Americans the average effective tax rate is 24%.
And that goes back to what you have just laid out which is the difference between making your money via income and then making your money via wealth via the appreciation of your assets. Just so that we're all on the same page about what this difference is, could you lay out exactly what that difference is? How do the wealthiest, the very very wealthiest make their money compared to, let's say, just average wealthy >> or even average American >> or average American.
>> Yeah. So, let's start with the tax and the tax lives of most Americans. The tax lives of most Americans is that they earn their money through work. as I imagine the two of you do and I do and most of our listeners do, right? And whether they work as independent contractors, whether they work for somebody else, they are subject to the heaviest taxes. They're subject to income taxes at rates up to 37% and payroll taxes at rates at 15.3% rates. and payroll taxes are paid.
They're we call them the hidden taxes because most Americans don't even realize that they're taxes. They show up as things like FICA and FUDA. Very hard to understand what they are. They're called contributions, not taxes. But they actually impose quite heavy taxes so that somebody who a self-employed person who earns $60,000 will pay more than $13,000 in federal income and payroll taxes.
That is a significant burden for somebody trying to get by on a $60,000 salary. As people go up the income tax uh brackets, uh the taxes get even more burdensome. So a very highinccome person will pay typically 50% in taxes. Uh maybe a little bit more if they're in a high tax state. And so they are paying significant amount of taxes. Now let's move over to our wealthiest Americans.
uh all the names that we have all come to know so well Buffett Bezos Musk all of those fellows uh and uh and for that group they live a very different tax lifestyle and that's because they acquire their wealth uh they do not acquire their wealth from salaries when we the one thing all of them have in common is that they take very low salaries the most highest paid salary of all in that group is Warren Buffett And he has never made more than $100,000 in both salary and bonus combined.
>> Humble of him. Yeah.
>> Yes. And he even cuts it back a little bit to pay for the fact that he sometimes uses his office space for his personal investments. So he charges himself for that and further reduces his salary. Jeff Bezos has always kept his salary at 82,000 which has enabled him to claim the child tax credit which he has done in the past. and all the others are just dollar a year guys. And so uh so they take no salary so they don't pay payroll taxes, they don't pay income taxes, pay very minimum taxes on that side. And so then well why were they not taking taxes? As you said, are they just being humble? No. The the what they are doing is they are counting on the growing value of their stocks. All of these people own significant amounts of their companies and their stocks have appreciated extraordinarily in value. So if you look just since 2023 there many of their have have seen stock growth between like 50 and 150 billion dollars just in the past 3 years. It's been extraordinary that amount of growth. So then the question becomes, I mean, if they're if they're making their money because their stocks are going up, well then how are they paying for their lifestyle? Like you can't buy a a Louis Vuitton handbag with Amazon shares. You need to pay with dollars. So if they're not getting salary, then how are they paying for themselves?
>> Exactly. And the key here is that they are using their stock and other assets to uh as collateral for loans and they are able to get very favorable rates on their loans because they have so much wealth. Right? So this is an extremely wellsecured loan and uh and they borrow lots and lots of money to support their lifestyles and they borrow enough money to cover the interest payments which are usually pretty modest because of the fact that their loans are so well secured. So they're able to support their lifestyles and their borrowing by borrowing. Um, now some Americans might think, "Yeah, but surely they've got to pay that money back." Because the rest of us are used to loans where we're given maybe even 20 years for a house loan or 30 years, but our other loans, you know, they they want them back in a set period of time. The difference is for the very wealthy, um, there are all sorts of people in the business of lending money. And when you have these very wellsecured loans, there's always people ready to just lend you money and to keep lending you money on that loan because they get paid for that service of lending money. And so, uh, so there's never a problem rolling over the loans or getting somebody else to give you a loan. These loans don't really have to be paid back because of the big market of people that are in the business of lending money. I'm glad that you laid it all out for us there because I just want to make sure that all of us are on the same page here. We're not saying or you're not saying that the lawyer or the doctor who's making 300 $400,000 a year isn't paying enough in taxes. Those guys are paying, as you say, 50% uh in taxes in many cases. What we're saying here is that there are a handful of billionaires who make their wealth via the appreciation of their assets.
And because of the way that the system is set up where you can essentially just borrow against those assets and especially at a at a very low interest rate, the more money you have, what it basically means is that you can get by as a billionaire paying almost nothing in taxes. And that's the point. The only tweak I'd like to make to that otherwise perfect description is that we're not just talking about a handful of billionaires. Somebody who has $100 million could still do this, right? And so it's a much larger group. I think it makes it we make a mistake when we describe this as a billionaire problem because the problem really is for anybody who has enough assets that they don't need to work they can depend on the growing value of their assets they too can avoid taxes and that's where why our problem that's why our system is so problematic is because it loses so many people and that's the real problem >> so professor and that'll bridge us nicely into I possible solves. I want to propose two possible solves and get your response.
Um, I think what we want are taxes that are the least taxing. And one of my intellectual role models is a guy named Daniel Conorman and the Israeli American psychologist who writes a lot about money and basically came to the conclusion that money does buy happiness, but it flattens out at a certain point. which says to me if we're in fact going to need uh to fund our navy and our parks that the least taxing tax would be an alternative minimum tax.
I think trying to redo the tax code which has been weaponized by wealthy people and corporations would be a full xarant. But an alternative minimum tax of say 40 or 50% on any income investment gain or if you borrow against that that's a trigger for capital um as an event and alternative minimum tax of say 40% on corporations. And then the second thing would be to lower the estate exemption from 30 million to 1 million. And I believe no one gets hurt, no decline in the quality of life, and you can fund the programs that substantially increase the quality of life and general well-being and happiness, universal child care, food stamps, tax credits for young people trying to buy homes. I would put forward to you and I want you to nullify or validate my thesis that the illusion of complexity has been weaponized by the incumbents.
Get rid of the estate tax exemption, alternative minimum tax on any income above a million dollars or corporations making above a certain amount.
>> I agree uh conceptually that we need to bring in investments and inheritances. I think that description is a little bit I I want to push back a little bit on the on the because >> the alternative minimum tax is a what that is is it's something that disallows deductions.
>> Okay? So you can't take a charitable deduction. You can't take a home interest deduction. It doesn't do anything about the problem that we have in our system of the failure to tax appreciation which is a problem of realization.
that's separate from alternate from deductions and about the failure to tax inheritances which again are subject to broad exclusion. So the problem that we have as I see it as a tax person it's I I share the I share the uh desire for the solution which is we need to bring investments and inheritances into the tax system but I disagree with the alternative minimum tax and estate tax framing the alternative minimum tax for that reason that I say the alternative minimum tax is really about deductions and so it's not really about all these things that are written out of the system. You say well then we should write them into the system. So that's how I would focus on it. I agree we should bring in appreciation. The problem is if you tax appreciation as it occurs currently each year, right?
That's which is I I don't know if you're proposing that that was one of the right. So how are we going to handle this appreciation? Right? We have all these guys they're walking around with hundreds of billions of dollars. When are we going to tax those gains? And different proposals have been made.
Right? Some say we should tax them each year as they occur. I think that's going to be too burdensome and too complex for people to understand. So what I think we should do is say that whenever the person transfers the property, whether they transfer it by gift, whether they transfer it at death, whatever they do with it, once they no longer own it, then they should tally the gains and pay taxes on it then so that the person who earns that income earns those profits pays taxes on them. Our failure is to not tax the appreciation to the person who earns it by letting them pass it taxfree. In Canada, they have this rule which says that whenever you transfer the property, we're going to tally the gains. And I think we should have that rule here for purposes of investment gains.
>> I 100% agree with that. What you're basically saying is what is the trigger for when something becomes a capital event where it's subject to taxation.
>> Yes.
>> And the basic strategy now is buy by by investing in your own company or buy a stock, borrow against it, and then die and get a step up in basis. So, I think we're brothers from another mother here.
I think the wealth tax is class welfare.
I think it makes for a speech. All you're going to do is fill the pockets of every accounting firm and trying to assess value. I can't imagine what a boon it would be for uh appraisers trying to convince you that one property is worth negative value and then try try and figure and we've talked about this.
16 countries have proposed a wealth tax.
13 have repealed it. They don't they typically just don't work very well. But the the only thing I would add to you in terms of it triggering a capital event that's taxable is when they borrow against it. And that's fine. I'd be perfectly happy to do it. I think there are some problems because uh first of all, you can borrow against any number of assets, right? You might have loss assets that you can borrow against. So it's not really clear. And also people's borrowing is very small in relation to their total wealth. So the only thing I'd be concerned about when we talk about taxing borrowing is I wouldn't want that to be seen as the solution to the problem because when somebody has $200 billion, you know, you can live a pretty good lifestyle with just a billion dollars. Hard to believe. And uh and so then we we don't want people to think they're solving the problem by taxing borrowing. So, that would be my only hesitation as you and I are fine-tuning our tax systems.
>> We'll be right back after the break. And by the way, we're heading out on tour next week. So, for more info and to get tickets to a show near you, head to profgmarketour.com.
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We're back with Profy Markets. So, Ry, one of the things you propose here is that we don't see enough realization events for the appreciation of assets.
uh and you know you keep on borrowing you borrowing you borrow you borrow against your assets continually continually you never have that moment where you sell those assets and then realize uh the tax. Um and so you're saying anytime there's any transfer of any kind if you donate it if you transfer it into a new account that is a moment to say okay let's figure out how much the the assets have appreciated and let's tax them. One thing that I that is confusing to me though is we do have a moment where rich people do transfer assets and that is when they die and they hand it over to usually their children. Um and so the question for me is and that that is this is the estate tax that's we tax those assets. Why isn't that working? Why is that a problem still? And that's a really important part of this conversation of understanding this issue because we have all these seeming failures in our income tax system, right? We don't tax appreciation. We also don't tax money received by inheritance. So if if you find $100 on the street, you leave your office, you found a hundred bucks, you are supposed to report that to the IRS and pay taxes on it. However, if somebody hands you a million dollar or $10 million or even $10 billion, you don't even have to report it. You don't have to tell anybody. You don't have to pay any taxes on it. And that also applies to money you receive by life insurance and money you receive by gifts. All of that is entirely tax-free.
Well, why do we have this enormous giveaway in the income tax system? The answer is because we count on a robust estate tax system sweeping up and making sure that these untaxed forms of income are eventually subject to tax with what had previously been a pretty ownorous tax. The estate tax was enacted just a couple of years after the income tax 1916. We've had it a long time and for a long time it did its work. uh basically we had a tax and we had a Congress that kept up with reforming the tax. So in 1976 and 1986 we had a problem of these long-term trusts and Congress enacted this whole additional tax as a backup called the generation skipping transfer tax. Then we had a problem with valuation gaming techniques. So four years later, Congress enacted special valuation rules and a whole other, you know, group of a whole other section to the code and these were both enacted under Republican president. So this was broad bipartisan supported keeping this tax up to date. However, what you know, you and your listeners might might remember or uh well, I guess maybe uh Ed, you might not remember it, but maybe you've heard about it. Pretend I did.
>> Pretend you did. Uh, before you were born, there was in the early 1990s a campaign funded by 18 of the country's richest families. And that campaign was designed to turn the public against the estate tax. They they sought estate tax repeal. And George W. Bush was a big carrier of the banner. And they their most effective thing that they did was they hired this guy by the name of Frank Luntz who was a communications expert.
and he said, "Never call it the estate tax because that sounds like something that's for rich people. Instead, call it the death tax and we'll bring this campaign and we'll say it's unfair and it's a double tax and it hurts family farms and businesses and and we're going to run this campaign." And this campaign was extraordinarily effective, not for their goal that they sought to achieve, which was actual get rid of the estate tax from the from the books, but it was successful in a way that was ultimately even, I'll argue, more successful, which is what they did is they were so successful in their campaign to make people feel uncomfortable with this idea of the estate tax that Congress stopped doing its job in terms of closing loopholes. Indeed, the last time that Congress has closed a single loophole was in 1990, 36 years ago. And so, as a result, over the past 36 years, there has been a proliferation of tax avoidance techniques that have been allowed to occur. They all have this sort of Dr. Seuss sounding names, Kratz and cruts, clats and cluts, grats and gruts, qerts, Q-tips, Q dots, the whole paniply of them. And and as uh all of these exclusions have developed, the estate tax has been completely corroded.
So it no longer does anything. Not because the exemption is too big, which it is big. it's 15 million and it used to be 1 million. But because of all of these things that take these transfers out altogether and so to raise or lower the exemption or raise or lower the tax rate will not be effective because this tax has been effectively killed. And so we're not going to start seeing all types of robust action with respect to this estate tax. And I think it's because the estate tax, it wasn't just well, we're always vulnerable to rich people. I think the problem was that the estate tax had an Achilles heel and that is that it was theoretically designed to be imposed on the donor. And so what that on the dead person and so what it meant was for those individuals who indeed paid high income taxes their whole lives, right? They paid lots of income taxes. Now we're imposing a second tax on them. And it seemed kind of just punitive in some weird way to the public. This was made easier because the public doesn't know very much about what happens on the income tax side.
Most people don't know that money receives by gifts and inheritances and all of those things are tax-free. And I know this is true because in this area a lot of people ask me, well, if I give more than $19,000 to my kids, don't they have to pay income taxes on it? This is because of some gift tax exclusion amount. But people are confused about this. And so the estate tax is a kind of an awkward tax and it made it it made it easy for Congress to stop acting.
What's particularly interesting is that the estate tax has become so ineffective that and I'm going to give you a number which is truly shocking. um when the top 1% of Americans had $55 trillion, which is how much they had in 2025, the total amount raised by the estate and gift tax, which is supposed to be a 40% tax on all transfers during life or at death. The total amount raised was 28 billion. Wow. That's 06%. It's nothing.
And it's not because of the exemption amount. It's not because of the lower rate. It's because people are able to avoid the tax altogether. And that's what the problem is.
>> I was just about to ask you if there is a rough number that we can estimate on how much we are losing uh to this issue to this estate tax loophole and you've given us our answer there north of 20 trillion close to $30 trillion it sounds like.
>> Right. If you think about that, we're designed, we're supposed to have a tax on the top 1% and that that percent has $55 trillion. By the way, this is a time where the total revenue raised by the federal government is like $5 trillion.
So, they have massive amounts of wealth.
So, when people say it doesn't matter if we tax the rich, that is just simply not true.
>> It almost sounds as if this fixing this problem would do a lot would do would solve a lot of our problems. And this gets to something else that I'd like to get your views on.
>> Yeah. Can I add one more piece here before we go? Yeah. I think the thing that makes it most telling that the estate tax is actually something that now works as a cover for the rich rather than as a burden is the fact that in 2025, a time when the Republicans fully controlled that new tax bill and they easily could have repealed the estate tax, they chose not to do it. No mention of it. It had been their number one issue, but now all of a sudden they didn't care. And that's because they wanted to preserve all of the income tax benefits they got when there was an estate tax that provided cover. So Ry, this gets to one of my concerns uh about our future in America. I am becoming increasingly concerned about the possibility of what we're calling an inheritocracy where we have been in so many ways ruled by the Elon Musks and the Bezos's of the world. And that was especially true after Citizens United and the billionaire spending on political campaigns exploded and they started to buy our elections. And that's not hyperbole. That is literally what happened. And we're seeing a lot of blowback and push back to that. But I think that we're about to see something even worse if we start to see that the world isn't run by the guys who created these incredible tech companies, but by the children of the guys who created these incredible tech companies, which by the way, we're already starting to see in the media world where Paramount is and Warner Brothers Discovery soon enough is about to be owned not by Larry Ellison, but by the guy who inherited the Larry Ellison fortune, by David Ellison. And we see this in the world of the Murdoch. We see this with Cander Fitzgerald where the commerce secretar's sons are now running one of the most important banks on Wall Street, etc. To the point where it seems that we're going to see a real loss of faith in the system itself. If we wake up one day and suddenly we're ruled by all of these rich kids. I had always thought that maybe the estate tax exemption is the way to fix that. and the fact that we increased it with the big beautiful bill to me was like well that's obviously not the right direction. You're saying that no that's not the problem it's these loopholes. My question is what do we do about this then? So I think the first thing that we need to do is we need to recognize that the estate tax has been really effectively killed. And as I mentioned, I think it is because uh it was easier to kill because of this vulnerability that it was imposed as a sort of a second tax on the person who dies. And and so for a lot of reasons, I think that we have to understand that this is not a tax that's going to be resurrected, but it will actually help us more to get rid of the tax than to keep it. Because when we get rid of the estate tax, we see about how our income tax system preferences inherited wealth.
And we have a tax system as I mentioned that has the income tax system is designed to be very very broad. It starts this idea that gross income includes all income from whatever source derived and so many so much so that even if uh two people do a barter exchange right somebody says I paint your house in exchange for you filing my taxes.
Each of those people are supposed to pay taxes on the value of what they received for that exchange. really broad comprehensive tax. And then you look at this tax and you look at gifts, inheritances, life insurance, and they're all excluded. Well, there's no justification for having a broad exclusion of all of those sources of income when lottery winnings and every other type of acquisitions of money is subject to tax. So, by getting rid of the estate tax, it frees us up to bring inheritances, gifts, and life insurance back into the income tax system where they belong. And there's a number of advantages to that. First of all, the tax will be imposed on each person who receives the money based on their appropriate income tax bracket. Um, and so, and it will also give us a chance to get rid of all of those problematic aspects of the estate tax that allowed for so much tax evasion, right? we could do a uh tax on inheritances 2.0 that is more appropriately levied on the recipients of inherited wealth. When we do so, we're going to need to think directly about how much, if at all, do we want to subsidize inheritances. I do think inheritances have become increasingly important for a lot of Americans, particularly as uh as our young Americans are having a hard time uh getting jobs that are sufficient to support the lifestyle, what we used to consider a basic middle class lifestyle.
Things like owning a home, being able to send your kids to school. A lot of people are depending on inheritances to help them acquire those basics in life.
And so I think that we need to understand that we need to provide some exemption for for inheritances. But when we recognize that it is an actual exemption for inheritances, then we can come up with a reasonable amount. Maybe each person should inherit be able to inherit 1 to2 million tax-free and after that they'll pay ordinary income rates.
Right? We can have a more coherent system by bringing it into the income tax system. Beyond loopholes, one thing that's also interesting, we were discussing the difference between capital and labor. And outside of these loopholes and outside of borrowing against the assets, the reality is the tax rate on capital gains is just significantly lower than the tax rate on income. Um, and I'm I we have this chart here from this this 2022 study which shows that the percent that the tax rate on capital actually used to be higher in America compared to the tax rate on labor and then recently it flipped. But also I would point out that this has been the subject of debate on like how exactly are you calculating what that tax rate is on labor versus capital.
also uh Gabriel Zuckman who's written a lot about this. He did a study and he said that it flipped as recently as 2018. So there's all this debate on like what actually is the true tax rate on capital versus labor. But the larger point being, should we really be taxing people's work, people's income uh at a higher rate than the income that they receive or the appreciation that that is realized on the appreciation of assets?
And I just like to get your views on that. Should we essentially be just increasing the capital gains tax?
>> We absolutely should be increasing the capital gains tax and equalizing it with the ordinary income rate. there's a lot of uh you know you you'll get 50 reasons about why people who want to keep that reduced rate uh you know all sorts of reasons that they have but none of those 50 reasons actually stand up on their own and so uh I believe absolutely we should be equalizing the rate the one thing that I think that we could do is we could provide inflation adjustment for uh for recognizing gain so let's say that uh somebody buys a house a long time ago they buy it for $100,000 and now it's worth a million dollars. But inflation has gone up so much that their actual gain, they're not really better off by $900,000 because that money isn't going to buy as much anymore, right? They can only just buy that same house or buy a less good house. I'm not explaining this well. Um, but a lot of that gain will be due to inflation. And so I think that we could equalize rates but allow for adjustment for inflation of basis so that people are paying are not paying taxes on the inflation gains and that would be a way of softening uh uh of softening that as it applies to uh long-held assets.
>> That seems like a great solution to me.
Just make them equal capital gains and make and and income tax. Just make them the same. The thing that has confused me though is that I'm not aware of any societies or maybe western societies, maybe I'm just not looking hard enough where that is the case. And I guess my question is why? Why is it standard that capital gains are taxed at a significantly lower rate than standard income?
>> Well, first of all, right here in the United States, they were taxed at the same rate in 1986. This was a tax bill.
The 1986 tax act was put forth by President Ronald Reagan. And I think that what he did was he brought down top rates but equalized capital gains and ordinary income. So it's definitely something that can be done. And one of the things I talk about in my book is how Andrew Melon, who was one of the early Treasury Secretaries and was very conservative, a staunch anti- tax the rich kind of guy, wrote himself that he saw no reason for taxing capital less than labor. And indeed, he thought capital should be taxed much higher than labor because capital is something that grows without anyone's effort, whereas labor is something that requires a lot of work. And so uh and so I think that this is uh it's definitely doable and we've had it in our notsodistant past.
>> Is there an argument that maybe it reduces investment or that it could you know just have an overall downward effect on I guess the stock market. One argument that you'll often hear, somebody will get very wonky and they'll say, "The statistics show that if you raise capital gains rates above a certain amount, then you stop raising money because people stop selling their property." Something like that, right?
But the reason that that is the case is because we allow people to avoid capital gains by avoiding sales. The problem was that loophole. If you close that loophole, then people will not be able to avoid capital gains. And that is one of these arguments that looks and sounds really persuasive, but really isn't when you look at it. We'll be right back. And for even more markets content, sign up for our newsletter at profgmarkets.com.
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>> We're back with Profy Markets.
>> So, professor, let's assume the administration comes to you and says, "Okay, we we're going to cut some expenses. We need fiscal sanity here and we're going to cut some spending, but we need to raise revenues." What would be your two or three ideas for what I would refer to as the least taxing or most equitable tax increases?
>> So the first thing as we talked about is to make sure that unrealized gains are have a time of realization. So that should be whenever the property is transferred. That's that's the first step. Brings coherence to the system.
>> So just let me press pause there. So what about 1031 exchanges or putting things into an LLC? Doesn't matter. As soon as it changes title, it's taxed.
Absolutely. When you change title, you're subject to tax.
>> And within hedge funds, when you buy and sell stocks, they're also sometimes able to defer taxes in any transaction. Would that go for equities and other property as well?
>> Whenever somebody no longer owns that property, that's when the gains should be tallied for that person. The second thing that I would do is repeal the estate tax because it is providing cover for the rich and not imposing any taxes or raising any revenue. and uh and we should decide how much we want to subsidize inheritances. Let's look that's the question that we're asking, right? To what extent should somebody who would otherwise be subject to tax on all income that they acquire be able to inquire an inheritance tax-free? Maybe it's a million dollars. Who knows what that amount would be? But bring that into the income tax system. Bring inheritances into the income tax system.
And when we do so, we'll have the chance to fix those uh all of those various avoidance techniques that we have that have become so entrenched in the estate tax world because it'll be a clean slate and we'll be able to uh have a smarter a smarter tax that avoids those problems.
Uh and then the third uh would be to equalize the tax rates between capital gains and ordinary income.
>> Love that. And then my fear, the only thing, and again, it's the only thing you've said that I'm I'm not 100% in line with, but I find that the tax code's gone from something like 400 pages to 4,000. And those 3,600, I think, are mostly there to screw the middle class by creating all sorts of loopholes. When I sold my company, the first 10 million was exempt. And I just don't see any reason for that. I I still think alternative minimum tax is the way to go because there's too many lobbyists who will figure out a way to keep inserting different loopholes.
>> But we we have an alternative minimum tax right now and it's not doing its job.
>> So it doesn't have any teeth.
>> Exactly. The AMT doesn't have teeth.
>> Well, isn't that because the AMT quite frankly isn't an AMT? It's an AMT that you can still stop. The exemptions can still get around.
>> Right. But if we can I mean I think that what you're saying is we need to clean up the system and make it better. I totally agree. But I just think the use of the word AMT makes it sound like that is a single response to the problem rather than the problem is to actually do a more granular approach to things like for example like that exemption those exemptions for startup businesses that you got you know I think those all need to be cleaned up but I think a lot of work can be done by invest by making sure that we're taxing investment gains and making sure that we're taxing inheritances. I was going to say not on that list is a wealth tax which is the most popular proposal uh in in the political sphere right now making ground in California. AOC has been talking about it. Why no wealth tax?
>> I think that we all understand now that the problem is that wealth owners have enormous acquisitions of wealth and they're not paying tax. And so the answer, the obvious answer seems to be let's tax their wealth. and uh particularly for people who have publicly traded stock where we can so easily see how much wealth they have.
The problem is that uh these sometimes these easy answers don't actually work and I feel that's the case with the wealth tax on a federal level. There's a very serious problem about whether the Supreme Court would find it unconstitutional. We have every reason to think that the Supreme Court would based on a recent case. uh and uh and you know they didn't have to go that way but there was a recent case more where they basically said oh yeah we might very quite well find this unconstitutional. So uh so on a federal level there's a real problem and then on state level there's a problem because states people can easily move from one state to another and we see this happening.
>> They can move countries.
>> Well I disagree about that. You cannot in Europe you can move countries very easily because in Europe you have the EU you have free transport and you don't have a unified tax system. I do not think we're going to have a serious problem in the United States of people leaving the United States and becoming citizens of Qatar or other countries.
>> Well, you have to turn in your passport and there's an exit tax. What I'm talking more about is corporations.
>> Well, that's a separate corporations is a whole separate issue, but I think that right now we're talking about individual taxes.
>> To your point, a wealth tax is what I think my party does a lot, and that is they want to be right as opposed to effective. I think a wealth tax makes a lot of sense, but they don't work because wealthy people are incredibly mobile, capital's incredibly mobile. And also, I think on the corporate side, and I'm curious, even going broader, don't you think we're going to need some sort of, and to her credit, uh, uh, Secretary Yellen was able to get this through, which I think that's right. Unless we get other nations to cooperate and unilaterally enforce some sort of corporate minimum tax, you're you're going to continue to see uh taxation not realized where it's or revenues not recognized where they're realized.
There's still going to be all sorts of arbitrage internationally taking place.
No, >> I want to add one thing about the estate tax that makes the I mean about the wealth tax that makes the wealth tax particularly problematic, which is the problem of valuation. As you mentioned earlier, we tend to think of it as like publicly traded companies, but lots of people own these highly complex partnership interests that are like 50 levels deep of partners. And people might own levels at all different at all different places. And the idea that we're going to have a strong enough IRS to be able to do annual taxation on these very complex interests, I think, is really problematic. And there's going to be a great incentive for people to move their assets out of the easy to value stock market to the difficult to value partnership interest. And that could impose a cost on all of us who have retirement and other savings that really depends on a robust stock market uh for our own savings. And so I think there's a lot of problems with the wealth tax. If we could get it done, let's say that our IRS was highly effective and our appraisal systems worked, do you think that it would be the right move if it were possible? I think if it were possible that it was constitutional, that people weren't going to move, that it could be effective, and that we could get the value, and we could get the public to not recoil at the idea that you have to report every single thing you own to the government, which I think is another potential problem with the with the wealth tax. Sure, I think it would be great. I think it does the most direct addressing of the problem, but those are a lot of ifs. And so I think we have to live in the world that we live in and not in a fantasy world where we're able to in one step curb the enormous power of the wealthiest Americans. I think it's a real problem that we have which is we have people who have astronomical amounts of wealth and we want to get it and we want to get it today and we want to address it but we don't live in a political system where that is going to happen. And I think that we and and my concern is when we focus on that type of thing, we create a false narrative about what's going on and it makes it seem like, well, we have to punish the rich when really the problem is that we have to bring the wealthy, their investments, and their inheritances into our income tax system. They should join us as fiscal citizens like everybody who earns money is already doing. So we we mentioned the deficit earlier and this unbelievable national debt that is piling up and up >> huge problem >> and it seems as though there's sort of this divide between the left and the right where the right says that the problem is how much money we spend. I would also add that the right is actually the one that is more responsible for the irresponsible fiscal spending, but that's maybe another conversation. But that's the argument on the right, the government, that's their area of focus. The government's spending too much. Let's get Doge and let's make sure that there's we see less wasteful spending. And then on the left, it's that we're not bringing in, we're not taxing rich people enough. We're not generating enough tax revenue. And so that's the thing that we got to focus on. My question for you is what is a bigger problem? Is it the spending or is it the tax revenue?
>> It's the tax revenue. Without a doubt, it's the t it is. And I think that if you look at the numbers as I say from let's say 2024 those are the numbers I have in my book right uh the country took in $5 trillion from all sources just under $5 trillion that's income tax payroll tax uh corporate tax estate and gift taxes tariffs everything right fees at the uh fees at the national park total revenue just under 5 trillion we spent 6.8 8 trillion. So, we had a shortfall. We had to add to our national debt. We had to borrow to make that $1.8 trillion deficit to cover it, causing huge problems uh to have this growing debt.
Meanwhile, at the same time, the richest 1% of Americans owned $55 trillion.
I say that and we know that there are all sorts of ways that that wealthiest 1% not just the billionaires are able to avoid taxes because they don't pay taxes on their most common sources of income which is their investment gains and their inheritances. So the failure to bring them into the tax system I find it hard to believe that we wouldn't have been able to easily cover that $1.8 8 trillion shortfall by taxing people that owned $55 trillion.
>> I've looked at some of the numbers on in terms of tax revenue as a percentage of GDP and what I found in the US over the last I don't know a few decades is that it's actually relatively stable. Like we we've had some dips for sure. Um but sort of at a very very broad level it hasn't really gone down or up in a significant way. Um, and so I guess what you would be asking of our nation is to make a significant change if if the problem is the tax revenue would be to be making a significant change in terms of how much we are taxed overall.
>> I don't think that's the case at all. I mean, if we're talking about you can't when you start using a number like the GDP, the GDP is enormous. So you can't really see the differences, right? I don't think the differences of raising 4.9 trillion and 7 trillion when you're talking about in relation to GDP is going to be a significant difference. So I don't think that that's uh what we're doing.
>> I think one thing we haven't talked about is what I would describe as the biggest tax cut in history in the US and also the most elegant and that is neutering the IRS.
>> It's a travesty and it's a giveaway and it is I I couldn't agree with you more.
>> What is it? $750 billion a year that goes the tax gap that goes uncollected.
>> I'm sure it's greater than that. So, I mean, we need to fix the tax code and we need to fix the IRS.
>> The next big change in our economy is supposed to be likely to be AI. We're seeing these data centers go up all over the place. Um, we've discussed sort of in general terms about figuring out a way to tax this. Maybe you tax the data centers. What do you think is the right taxation approach to the next uh big technology?
>> AI is really going to cause a problem for our tax system if you think about it. And it's interesting. I was on a I I was at a program uh the other day, actually one where Scott got an award uh and uh leadership now. Somebody was speaking an AI expert was speaking about well how how AI might very well be disruptive, right? we're going to we're going to replace a lot of uh a lot of workers with AI agents. And he said, well, the answer is going to have to be UBI, universal basic income. And I'm thinking, and who's paying for this universal basic income? Because in fact, when you look at our income tax system, right, 85% of the revenue comes from individuals and labor and payroll taxes.
And so if we remove workers ne and we we're gonna have massive capital growth, we're going to have a lot fewer workers.
We're gonna really suffer in the amount of revenue that we're raising under our existing system. So I think it's a serious problem. Uh so one thing is that we need to address is by making sure that we are in fact taxing capital because uh under our current system we don't tax capital and that's of course where all the gains are occurring as opposed to taxing companies. I think that we're going to have to figure out how to do it. I don't I'm I don't have the the particular answer to it, but it you know, we're going to we're going to have to find a way of bringing um this massive uh growing concentrations of wealth into our tax system as well, either under corporate taxes, business taxes, or special AI taxes.
>> The big problem in the political world is getting everyone to agree on this stuff. we can have the right answer but if we can't get people to agree and get behind it then doesn't matter doesn't work. So uh I'd love to get your thoughts on how we do that. What is the message? What is the argument that we can get everyone behind such that we do come up with the right solution and fix the problem?
>> I love your question. Thank you for that. Uh the answer starts with educating the public as you started your very first question right people are being told that the rich people are already paying taxes and because our tax system is complicated they think all right I guess I guess we're wrong right and because individuals are paying such burdensome taxes it never occurs to them that the rich aren't paying taxes so the first step has to be educating the public which is one of the reasons I'm so happy that you guys had me on your show right you're you're already doing that work. You're already spreading the good word, but I'm it's a pleasure for me to be able to join in that. The problem with our system is that we are heavily burdening work income and people who have investments and inheritances.
We are giving them a free pass. And the public can understand that. The public is clamoring to understand that. And once they understand that, then they understand that the solution involves making sure that we're taxing investments and inheritances. just as we tax labor income.
>> Ray Matto is a professor at Boston College Law School where she teaches tax law and policy, wills and trusts law, and estate planning. She is co-founder and director of the Boston College Law School Forum on Philanthropy and the public good, a nonpartisan think tank that explores how the rules governing the charitable sector could best serve the public good. She was named one of Time's 100 most influential people in philanthropy in 2026 for her work critiquing the tax code. And her most recent book, The Second Estate: How the Tax Code Made an American Aristocracy, is available now. Professor Matto, thank you so much for your time.
>> Thank you so much for having me. I really enjoyed our conversation.
>> We love your work, Professor. Keep it up.
>> Oh, thank you. Have me back on another show, Scott. I've been clamoring.
>> Love that. I love that.
>> Okay. Thanks. Bye-bye.
>> Thank you for listening to Profy Markets from Profy Media. If you liked what you heard, give us a follow and join us for a fresh take on markets on Monday.
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