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One
of the World's Richest Slams Dividend Tax Cut
Calling it 'Voodoo Economics,'
Saying it Puts Burden on Low-Income Families
NEW YORK (CNN/Money) May 21, 2004 - Renewing his criticism of
the dividend tax cut laid out by the Senate last week, Berkshire Hathaway's
Warren Buffett called the proposal "voodoo economics" that uses "Enron-style
accounting."
The Senate's plan for dividends to be 50 percent tax free in
2004, 100 percent tax free in 2004 through 2006 and then face the full tax in
2007 would "further tilt the tax scales toward the rich," Buffett wrote in an
opinion piece in the Washington Post.
Buffett posed a hypothetical situation in which Berkshire
Hathaway, which does not currently pay a dividend, paid $1 billion in dividends
next year.
Through his 31 percent ownership of the company, Buffett said
he would receive an additional $310 million in income that would reduce his tax
rate from about 30 percent to 3 percent, while his office secretary would still
have a tax rate of about 30 percent.
"The 3 percent overall federal tax rate I would pay — if a
Berkshire dividend were to be tax free — seems a bit light," Buffett wrote.
Instead of the Senate's tax cut plan, Buffett proposed that it
provide tax reductions to those who need and will spend the money in the form of
a Social Security tax "holiday" or a tax rebate to lower-income people.
"Putting $1,000 in the pockets of 310,000 families with urgent
needs is going to provide far more stimulus to the economy than putting the same
$310 million in my pockets," Buffett added.
He closed the piece by saying that the "government can't
deliver a free lunch to the country as a whole. It can, however, determine who
pays for lunch. And last week the Senate handed the bill to the wrong party."
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