DiabloWags said:dajo9 said:DiabloWags said:
Yup.
I cant even imagine how a wealth tax could be enforced.
Do we send IRS auditors over to some rich guys flat in London to "value" a painting? A vintage Ferrari in his garage? Some native American baskets? A Patek?
How would these auditors even be "qualified" to do such an evaluation?
Do they need to intern at the Smithsonian first?
Sotheby's
When an audit is done the IRS can hire somebody from Sotheby's to help out. Not a big deal.
Cool story.
There wont be enough people at Sotheby's to "help" out. Cool story though.
Silly premise, almost all art work with a value in the 7 figures or above is insured. If someone wants to keep a very valuable art piece undeclared, he runs the risk of that piece being stolen, or being prosecuted as a tax dodger, as art pieces in that price range tend to be well known.
A marginal wealth tax should start on personal assets above $5-10 million at a low rate (something like 0.25% per year) and gradually increase with every decimal figure to something like 2.5% for assets above $1 billion.