Should the United States impose a wealth tax on the ultra-rich?
Fair share or capital flight trigger?
Multiple federal legislative proposals — including Senator Elizabeth Warren's Ultra-Millionaire Tax Act of 2026, the Sanders-Khanna Make Billionaires Pay Their Fair Share Act, and Senator Ron Wyden's Billionaires Income Tax Act — are currently before Congress, seeking to impose annual taxes on the net worth of America's wealthiest households. Simultaneously, states including California, Massachusetts, Washington, and New York are advancing or have passed their own taxes targeting high-net-worth individuals. The proposals come as Federal Reserve data from Q3 2025 shows the top 1% holding $55 trillion in assets, equal to 31.7% of all U.S. wealth.
If a billionaire's fortune grows by $10 billion in a year but they never sell a share, did they earn income — and does the government have the right to take a cut anyway? The answer depends entirely on whether you think extreme wealth is a personal achievement or a public problem.
- Federal Reserve Distributional Financial Accounts, Q3 2025
- Institute for Policy Studies billionaire wealth analysis, 2025
- UC Berkeley economists Emmanuel Saez and Gabriel Zucman, revenue projections for Warren Ultra-Millionaire Tax Act
- Pew Research Center poll, 2025, on tax rates and income thresholds
- January 2025 poll on wealth inequality and billionaire taxation
- Nestpoint poll on California Billionaire Tax Act
- Sanders-Khanna Make Billionaires Pay Their Fair Share Act, introduced March 2, 2025
- Warren Ultra-Millionaire Tax Act of 2026 legislative text and summary
- Wyden Billionaires Income Tax Act summary
- California Billionaire Tax Act (2026 proposal) legislative summary
- Congressional Budget Office and Tax Policy Center analyses of wealth tax revenue and avoidance
- European wealth tax repeal history (OECD documentation)