如何转换财富税与所得税
How to convert between wealth and income tax

原始链接: https://paulgraham.com/winc.html

财富税常被政客误解,他们往往将“区区1%”的征税描述为适度。然而从数学角度来看,假设无风险收益率为5%,1%的财富税相当于20%的所得税。 若要在这两者间进行换算,需将财富税税率除以资本年收益率。由于财富税是“无风险的”(无论市场表现如何,政府都会征收),它实际上构成了资本沉重且必然的负担。 如果美国一个中等州实施1%的财富税,居民的总边际税率将超过60%,足以媲美全球最高税率水平。支持者通过将财富税表述为较小的百分比,掩盖了其对纳税人造成的极端财务影响。认清这一“20比1”的换算比例,便能看出此类提议远比支持者所声称的更为激进。理解这种关系对于进行知情的政策辩论至关重要。

关于保罗·格雷厄姆(Paul Graham)将财富税率折算为所得税等效税率的文章,Hacker News 上的讨论呈现出严重的两极分化。 格雷厄姆认为,1% 的财富税在数学上等同于 20% 的所得税增长(假设资本回报率为 5%),他据此认为这种税率对富人而言高得令人望而却步。 评论者对这一观点提出了强烈批评,主要分歧点如下: * **逻辑缺陷:** 批评者认为,这种计算假设所有收入均来自投资,忽略了仅依靠劳动获取收入的人群。 * **逃税避税:** 许多人指出,超级富豪往往几乎不缴纳所得税,这使得这种“等效”比较失去了意义。 * **执行难度:** 怀疑论者指出,财富难以衡量,往往通过复杂的结构隐藏,且基于主观的“账面收益”而非已实现的收入。 * **社会目的:** 财富税的支持者认为,无论理论上的税收等价性如何,财富税对于遏制失控的不平等和系统性的权力失衡都是必要的。 归根结底,这一讨论反映了两种观点之间的深刻鸿沟:一方认为财富税是对成功人士不切实际或不公平的负担,另一方则认为它是实现经济公平的必要手段。
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原文
How to Convert Between Wealth and Income Tax

May 2026

How do you convert between wealth and income tax? If a government imposes a wealth tax of 1%, what's the equivalent in income tax?

It's clear from the way most politicians talk about the subject that they not only don't know the answer, but don't even realize there's such a question.

In fact the conversion rate between them is about 20. A wealth tax of 1% is equivalent to an income tax of 20%.

To convert between wealth and income tax rates, you have to divide by the rate of return on capital. The conversion rate of 20 comes from assuming that the risk-free rate of return is 5%. Historically that's an optimistic assumption. 4% might be more realistic. But 5% will do. [1]

If we run through an example it will be clear how this works. Suppose you have $100, you're getting a 5% rate of return on this capital, and there's a 20% income tax. The 5% rate of return means at the end of one year your $100 has made you another $5. But you have to pay 20% of that, or $1, in income tax, so your after-tax income is $4. At the end of the year, after paying taxes, you have $100 + $4 = $104.

Now suppose instead of a 20% income tax, there's a 1% wealth tax. At the end of the year your $100 has made you another $5, as before. But that year you had to pay 1% of your $100, or $1, in wealth tax. So at the end of the year you have $99 + $5 = $104.

Each 1% of wealth tax is equivalent to 20% of income tax.

It's clear that politicians don't get this from the way they talk about a "mere 1%" wealth tax. None of them would speak of adding a "mere 20%" to the income tax rate, even though that's mathematically the same thing. [2]

Politicians understand that an additional 20% income tax would be a lot. And indeed a US state that added 20% to its top income tax rate would have extraordinarily high taxes.

Currently the country with the highest marginal income tax rate is Denmark, at 60.5%. The top US federal tax rate is 37%, and the median state income tax rate is Oklahoma's, which is 4.75%. So in the median case, a state adding an additional 20% in income tax would have a total marginal tax rate of 37% + 4.75% + 20%, or 61.75%. [3]

In the median case, US state politicians talking about adding a "mere 1%" wealth tax are talking about causing the residents of their state to have the highest taxes in the world. That's not the sort of decision you make lightly.

That's why I think few politicians currently understand how to convert between wealth and income taxes. You can tell from the way they talk about the subject that they don't understand the momentousness of what they're proposing. But I'm optimistic that we can teach them. The answer's not hard to understand, once you realize the question exists.

Notes

[1] It's possible to get a higher rate of return if you're willing to risk losing your capital. But to convert between tax rates you should use the risk-free rate of return, because considered as an anti-investment, a wealth tax is absolutely risk-free: you will absolutely owe the government that money. And while you do have to put "risk-free" in scare quotes when talking about returns, the kind of risks you're talking about now are the almost apocalyptic kind that would make tax rates a moot point.

[2] The same conversion rate applies to capital gains. The source of the multiple is whether the money is taxed every year or just once. Indeed it's the same math you'd use to calculate the value of any income-generating asset.

[3] You can deduct some state tax from your federal income taxes, but there's a cap on how much you can deduct, which means in the marginal case we simply add the two rates.

Thanks to Trevor Blackwell, Jessica Livingston, Carolynn Levy, Jon Levy, Alex Tabarrok, and Harj Taggar for reading drafts of this.

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