

Sharing the Wealth? Exploring a State Wealth Tax
12 snips Sep 19, 2025
In this discussion, tax experts David Gamage, a law professor researching taxation, and Darien Shanske, a professor specializing in state tax policy, delve into their recent research on state-level wealth taxes. They outline how these taxes could effectively target intangible wealth and address inequities in current tax systems. The conversation covers historical context, constitutional challenges, and design considerations necessary for implementation. They also explore the political landscape around such reforms and why a state wealth tax may be the solution for greater fairness.
AI Snips
Chapters
Transcript
Episode notes
Modernizing Property Tax For Intangibles
- A state wealth tax would expand historic general property tax concepts to intangible assets and could be collected via income or property tax channels.
- David Gamage and Darien Shanske argue this adapts old tax structures to modern intangible-dominated wealth.
States As Tax Policy Laboratories
- State-level wealth taxes differ politically and constitutionally from federal taxes and can serve as policy laboratories for tax innovation.
- David Gamage says states can tailor progressive taxation to local preferences without waiting for federal action.
Income Tax Fails On Extreme Intangibles
- Intangible financial wealth has grown and existing income taxes poorly capture extreme wealth from appreciation and nonrealized gains.
- Gamage argues that rising intangible wealth reduces the effectiveness of current state and federal income taxes.