Kevin Williamson of National Review Online explores Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump’s promise to go after those who’ve made big money through hedge funds.
Donald Trump has promised that he will ease burdens on the middle class by going after “the hedge-fund guys,” who, he believes, do not pay enough in taxes. “They’re making a tremendous amount of money — they have to pay taxes,” he says. Because the one thing in which Trump is consistent is his vagueness, it is not 100 percent clear whether what he is talking about is the so-called carried-interest loophole, which is very much on the minds of people with economic-policy views similar to Trump’s — meaning Bernie Sanders and Hillary Rodham Clinton and other cookie-cutter progressives — but in any case, it is worth having a look at the reality and the myths of how hedge funds and other financial firms are taxed, assuming that we want to start with facts and proceed to opinion rather than go like a crab backward.
The myth is this: Hedge-fund managers take home tremendous paychecks that are really plain old payments for services but which are disguised as long-term capital gains, meaning that they get taxed at 15 percent rather than the 39.6 percent I pay on my salary, which is fundamentally unfair.
The thing about myths is, they’re myths.