Here is a quick rundown of some proposals, calculated by chatgptHere’s a breakdown of the **estimated annual revenue gains or savings** from each of your listed policy options:---### **Wealth Taxes****Top 1% of Wealth: approx. $50 trillion****Top 2% of Wealth: approx. $70 trillion**| Policy | Revenue Gain (Annually) ||--------------------------------------------|-----------------------------|| 1% tax on top 1% wealth | $500 billion || 2% tax on top 1% wealth | $1.0 trillion || 1% tax on top 2% wealth | $700 billion || 2% tax on top 2% wealth | $1.4 trillion |---### **Income Taxes****Top 10% earners: ~$6.5 trillion annual income****Top 20% earners: ~$9.5 trillion annual income**| Policy | Revenue Gain (Annually) ||--------------------------------------------|-----------------------------|| 10% increase on top 10% income | $143 billion || 10% increase on top 20% income | ~$209 billion |*Note: These are based on a ~10% relative increase in effective federal income tax, not a flat 10% income tax.*---### **Spending Cuts****Federal spending (excluding Social Security): ~$5.1 trillion**| Policy | Savings (Annually) ||--------------------------------------------|-----------------------------|| 10% cut to all non-Social Security spending| ~$510 billion |---### **Quick Summary Table**| Policy | Revenue/Savings (Annual) ||--------------------------------------------|-----------------------------|| 1% tax on top 1% wealth | $500 billion || 2% tax on top 1% wealth | $1.0 trillion || 1% tax on top 2% wealth | $700 billion || 2% tax on top 2% wealth | $1.4 trillion || 10% tax increase on top 10% income earners | $143 billion || 10% tax increase on top 20% income earners | $209 billion || 10% cut to non-Social Security spending | $510 billion |---Let me know if you want any combos totaled or modeled over a decade!
The current usa deficit is 1.8 trillion
The real question is do we want to balance it, run a surplus, or just grow debt with inflation. The inflation thing is smartest