Press
Release
For
Immediate Release - April 13, 1999
Contact:Betsy Leondar-Wright
(617)423-2148 x13
Wealthy Taxpayers Give
Away $1.5 million in Tax Breaks
"Stop
giving us tax breaks! We don't need them and we won't accept them.
I plan to give away my windfall from last year's capital gains
tax cut. And I plan to speak out against all this year's proposals
for more tax cuts for wealthy people like me."
- Bob Burnett,
former VP of CISCO Systems, member of Responsible Wealth
Wealthy taxpayers
organized by Responsible Wealth have pledged to give away their
windfall from the recent capital gains tax cut, mostly to organizations
working for fairer economic policies.
The Tax Break
Pledge campaign began in 1998 as a response to the Taxpayer Relief
Act of 1997, which benefited primarily wealthy investors. Even though
they personally benefited from this change, these well-off taxpayers
donated $1.2 million in 1998 to challenge tax policies that favor
investors over wage-earners. As of today, 1999 Tax Break Pledges
total $1.5 million, from the 76 pledgers who have already
calculated their capital gains tax cut. More pledges will be made
by April 15 and over the following month.
Responsible
Wealth decided to continue the Tax Break Pledge in 1999 to oppose
the following bills, which offer tax breaks exclusively or primarily
to the richest taxpayers:
- Repeal
of Capital Gains Tax for Individuals (H.R. 106, Knollenberg,
R-MI)
The wealthiest 10 percent of Americans own 87 percent of all stock
owned by households, so this bill would transfer the tax burden
from asset owners to wage earners. In 1998, the richest one percent
of families got 66 percent of the benefits of the 1997 capital
gains cut, an average of $7,680. The bottom 80 percent of US households
got an average tax cut of just $6.
- 10% "across
the board" tax cut (H.R. 3, Kasich, R-OH)
The wealthiest 10 percent of households would get 62 percent of
the tax givebacks, an average of $20,700 apiece. The 60 percent
of taxpayers who make less than $38,000 a year would get an average
of just $99 apiece.
- Repeal
of the Estate Tax (H.R. 107, Knollenberg, R-MI) Only 2 percent
of households have estates big enough to owe estate taxes. The
minimum estate eligible for estate taxes was raised by the 1997
law from $600,000 in steps up to $1 million, and this bill would
eliminate it entirely.
Responsible
Wealth is a project of United for a Fair Economy, a national organization
that spotlights growing inequality in income and wealth. Responsible
Wealthís more than 400 members are all in the top 5% of income
or wealth. Responsible Wealthís nine shareholder resolutions
challenging excessive CEO pay were profiled in the Wall Street Journal
on April 8.
Responsible Wealth Tax
Break Pledgers Available for Interviews
Interviews can
be arranged through Betsy Leondar-Wright at United for a Fair Economy,
617-423-2148 x13.
Bob Burnett
"I made
a lot of money as a Vice President of CISCO. Now Iím starting
new businesses and trying to create jobs. Why should we investors
get special breaks while others are struggling to make a living?
That kind of policy doesnít build a stronger economy."
- First VP
of Engineering at CISCO Systems.
- Retired at
age 50; since retirement, has worked in both for-profit and non-profit
sectors to create jobs, including jobs for homeless people and
youth.
- Current business
ventures include developing a pollution-free engine and underwriting
minority-owned small businesses.
- Will donate
his capital gains savings of over $100,000 to a number of public
interest organizations through the Tides Foundation.
Frank Butler
"As
a former CEO, I see the growing gap between big investors and average
workers as a destructive trend for business and for our society
as a whole."
- Former President
of Eastman Gelatine Corporation (a subsidiary of Eastman Kodak).
- Past President
and current board member of Ministry of Money, which deals
with money issues from a biblical perspective; past Chairman of
the Board of Faith at Work.
- Pledged his
tax cut of $1,200.
Michele McGeoy
"If
Iím earning money as my stocks grow, and someone else is
working hard as a teacher, why should I pay a lower tax rate than
her? I would be ashamed to take such a hand-out."
- Created a
software company in San Francisco, California; sold it in 1993.
- Currently
CEO of RH Solutions, software company.
- Founder of
a non-profit that provides technology and training to high-school
students.
- Interviewed
on CBS This Morning on 4/1/98 and numerous other radio and television
shows representing Responsible Wealth; her 4/15/98 op-ed appeared
in Knight-Ridder newspapers.
Barbara Overby
"At
a time of growing economic inequality, budget cuts in public services,
high taxes for the working poor and middle class, and national crises
in health care and education, why give more money to those who already
have enough?"
- Founded and
now runs Lifebridge Foundation in New York City.
- Daughter
and heir of a cable TV pioneer in Connecticut.
Has pledged
her $20,769 capital gains tax cut to United for a Fair Economy.
Allen Andersson
"My
initial investment of $1,500 in Lightspeed International is now
worth about $26 million. Like most taxpayers, I try to reduce my
taxes. But as a citizen, I'm outraged that people who work hard
every day for their money are paying higher tax rates than me. That
doesn't seem right."
- Co-Founder
of Lightspeed International, sold to CISCO in March 1998.
- Earned no
capital gains in 1998, so can't take Tax Break Pledge, but plans
to sell CISCO stock worth $26 million in coming years and give
most of the proceeds away.
George Pillsbury
"The
growing domination of our political system by big corporate and
individual donors is eroding our sense of democracy and our sense
of community."
- Great grandson
of the founder of The Pillsbury Company.
- Director
of Massachusetts Money and Politics Project, a project of the
Commonwealth Coalition, based in Boston.
Jenny Ladd
"Iwant
to live in a society where we can all walk the streets with less
fear, rather than some of us living in gated communities and others
behind bars."
- Philanthropic
advisor and donor organizer in Northampton, Massachusetts.
- Donated her
$6,972 tax break to non-profit organizations working for economic
fairness.
Mike Lapham
"As
a wealthy person, I have benefited financially from the Reagan,
Bush and Clinton tax cuts for the wealthy, but I donít believe
that shifting the tax burden onto lower and middle class households
is in our countryís long-term best interest."
- Stockholder
of family-owned paper mill in upstate New York.
- Project Director
of Responsible Wealth.
Chuck Collins
"We're
told that the economy is booming, but there's something incongruous
about this assertion when wages for the average working person are
lower than in 1973."
- Co-founder
and Co-Director of United For a Fair Economy (UFE).
- Co-author
of Shifting Fortunes: The Perils of the Growing American Wealth
Gap, published two weeks ago by United for a Fair Economy.
- Has appeared
on the Oprah Winfrey Show and CBS This Morning.
|