This podcast is a partnership between the Center for Public Integrity, a newsroom that investigates inequality, and Bloomberg Tax.
Starting with Ronald Reagan in 1981, every Republican president at some point has made tax cuts a centerpiece of his economic agenda, often with scant evidence that these policies have produced economic benefits that touch all Americans.
Delving into some of the more notable moments in this history offers a roadmap to this inequality.
How did a tax designed to discourage multigenerational inherited wealth come to be known as the “death tax?” Why are qualified dividends—which most taxpayers see as a single line on their 1040s—an outsized benefit for high income individuals? How did generous incentives help to reshore income held abroad?
Listen here and subscribe to Talking Tax on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Google Podcasts, Stitcher, Megaphone, or Audible.
On this episode of Talking Tax, James B. Steele, a two-time Pulitzer Prize journalist who has covered economic inequality for decades, sat down with Bloomberg Law editor Bernie Kohn to talk about his story co-written for the Center for Public Integrity and Bloomberg Tax showing how US tax policies have consistently fueled inequality.
Do you have feedback on this episode of Talking Tax? Give us a call and leave a voicemail at 703-341-3690.
To contact the reporter on this story:
To contact the editors responsible for this story:
Learn more about Bloomberg Tax or Log In to keep reading:
See Breaking News in Context
From research to software to news, find what you need to stay ahead.
Already a subscriber?
Log in to keep reading or access research tools and resources.