

Andrea Louise Campbell, "Taxation and Resentment: Race, Party, and Class in American Tax Attitudes" (Princeton UP, 2025)
Sep 10, 2025
Andrea Louise Campbell, a Professor at MIT and the author of "Taxation and Resentment," delves into the paradox of American tax attitudes. She discusses why many Americans support progressive taxes in theory but favor regressive policies in practice. Racial dynamics significantly influence these views, especially among white voters. The podcast explores the historical evolution of the tax system and the complexity of public perceptions about fairness, revealing how confusion benefits the wealthy and undermines tax equity.
AI Snips
Chapters
Books
Transcript
Episode notes
How The U.S. Tax System Was Built
- Many major U.S. taxes were created in the early 20th century and layered across federal, state, and local levels.
- This produced a patchwork (no VAT) that shapes contemporary tax politics and citizen views.
How Progressivity Was Undermined
- Progressivity eroded via lower top marginal rates and a growing tax-expenditure system of deductions and credits.
- The combined effect reduced effective tax rates for the rich and flattened overall tax progressivity.
The Abstract–Practical Tax Paradox
- Many Americans prefer progressive taxation in the abstract but oppose specific progressive taxes in practice.
- They often dislike progressive taxes while tolerating regressive ones that cost them more as a share of income.