How Super-Wealthy Americans Fare Under Biden’s New Tax Plan

If you’re wondering how President Joe Biden’s tax framework would affect rich Americans, here’s a rough scorecard.

Winning: The vast majority of the top 1%, who might even get a tax cut.

Losing: The rich-but-not-fabulously rich, still working to build their fortunes.

Breathing a sigh of relief: America’s billionaires, who, despite threats to the contrary, likely get to keep the tools and tricks many use to avoid taxes altogether.

Biden’s plan was to raise tax rates on pretty much the entire 1%, the 1.6 million taxpayers earning at least $500,000 annually. After pushback from moderate Democrats, he’s settled for a far thinner slice of the upper crust, targeting the roughly 22,000 Americans earning $10 million or more with a new surtax.

Many Democrats including Biden also wanted to narrow America’s widening wealth gap by plugging loopholes and finding new ways to tax large fortunes. Those proposals ended up on the chopping block, though progressive Democrats are pushing to slip some back into the $1.75 trillion reconciliation bill before it becomes law.

Taxing the super-rich is difficult for the simple reason that huge fortunes don’t necessarily mean huge incomes. Investment gains are only taxed when they’re sold, and the very wealthy only rarely need to sell.