The McCain campaign has been pushing this New York Post item pretty hard today.
We’re in for taxing times if Barack Obama wins the White House, says CNBC’s Maria Bartiromo. “He’s going to take the capital gains tax at 15 percent right now all the way up to 25 to 28 percent,” the “Money Honey” tells Avenue. “Sell anything, like a home or stocks, and make a profit . . . [almost] 30 percent of the profit will go to the government instead of 15.”
The income tax is also in for a bump. Bartiromo says, “Right now [it] is 35 percent, Obama wants to take that to 39 percent . . . We’re talking about people who make over $200,000. That’s not rich. So it’s actually going to impact more people than you may think.”
Time and the Politico quickly featured the item, but neither added any context of fact-checking. That’s a shame, because Bartiromo’s mistaken.
First, the notion that people who sell their home for a profit will soon get hit with a 30% tax is just wrong. Profit on home sales are tax exempt on gains up to $500,000 for couples. Bartiromo, who should know this, makes it sound like this will apply to everyone, instead of a very select few who make a half-million-dollar profit when they sell their house.
Second, Bartiromo believes people who make over $200,000 are “not rich.” Is that so? Oliver Willis noted, “Median U.S. household income is $48,201. Yes, I hope conservatives take up this battle and run with it. This is what happens when people like Maria Bartiromo and John McCain surround themselves with fellow six and seven figure travelers — they lose all context for what the real world is like.”
For that matter, according a report from the Citizens for Tax Justice, “[I]n 2008, only 3.2 percent of taxpayers will have adjusted gross income (AGI) greater than $200,000 and only 2.1 percent will have AGI over $250,000.”
Ali at TP noted that Bartiromo “is making a seven-figure salary and just received a whopping $500,000 for her book advance,” which may skew her perspective a bit on what constitutes “rich,” but specifically questions why the McCain campaign thinks Bartiromo’s perspective is worthy of accolade.
The McCain campaign’s perception of American incomes is woefully out of touch. An income of $200,000 places an American family firmly in the “rich” category:
* The 2006 census showed that an income of $174,012 put an American household within the top 5 percent of income earners.
* A report by the Citizens for Tax Justice estimates that in 2008, “only 3.2 percent of taxpayers will have adjusted gross income (AGI) greater than $200,000 and only 2.1 percent will have AGI over $250,000.”
* A 2007 Wall Street Journal article placed earners who make $277,000 in the top 1 percent of all income earners.
And even that would only make this slightly embarrassing, were it not for the fact that McCain actually wants to base his economic policies on his confused worldview — most of the benefits of McCain’s “middle class tax relief” plan go to those in the top 1 percent.
That, Maria Bartiromo, is rich.