I was rather dismayed but not surprised when I saw the news that the United Kingdom was enacting a “bonus tax” which is to be a one-time tax on bonuses of bankers in excess of $40,000. As the circus spread its influence, France signaled that it will enact a similar policy and Germany’s chancellor referred to the idea as, get this – “Charming”. Not to be outdone in the game of punishing those rich greedy bankers, I wonder what the pay czar has in mind within the US aside from the current mandate of enforcing pay caps on the upper echelon of US banks that received government assistance. Aside from the fact that a one-time tax such as this is really nothing more than a punitive measure and would take in only marginal revenues in a single tax year, it sends a horrible message and it would be oh-so enticing to extend it or make it permanent once lawmakers see just how good it felt to punish those nasty bankers. While this would have sounded outlandish and far-fetched years ago (OK, well, that also was under a Bush presidency so it would be silly to even imagine but…) given what’s transpired in just a year of this new administration, I wouldn’t be surprised at all to see a “bonus tax” on all US workers. I mean, the administration was actually mulling over the prospect of oversight of all bankers’ pay even if they didn’t need TARP funds a while ago until they shifted gears a bit to focus on something of substance – umm, the economy and double digit unemployment? Imagine a Bonus Tax for Every Industry With your typical American coming nowhere near a $40,000 bonus if they get one at all, the reality is that most Americans wouldn’t bat an eye at an attempt by Congress to enact harsh taxes on these “fatcat” bonuses right? Just like few on main street really care that the top 2% of Americans are going to be forced to fund healthcare for millions of Americans or that Congress is mulling over a “war tax” the rich should fund as well. The obedient American has been conditioned to seek more and more handouts and freebies to “get theirs” without really questioning why they’re getting it, whether they should be getting it or at what net cost. Cash for this, Cash for that, homebuyer tax credits – this is all borrowed money that our children will someday have to pay back – and our generation should be ashamed for robbing them of their future. But we’re not. Let’s consider how a Bonus Tax would hit other non-bank industries: There are millions of middle-class commission based jobs that rely heavily on bonuses. This ranges from business-development type professions in every industry from contract manufacturing to environmental consulting. Sales reps are often start with a marginal salary with the potential for big bucks by way of a bonus structure for closing the deal. This type of low salary/high bonus combination drivers out mediocre and complacent performance and rewards aggressive, results-oriented cultures. Of course, when this goes too far, there are pockets of unethical behavior, win-at-any-cost

Originally posted here:
Should the US Adopt a “Bonus Tax” Like Europe is Enacting?
