Want more confirmation from another left-of-center source?
Here are some excerpts from a column in the New York Times by Monica Prasad, a sociology professor at Northwestern.
We can learn from Sweden, but the lesson is not what many people think. Rich Swedes do get taxed at high rates, but so does everyone else: The average American worker’s total tax burden is 31.7 percent of earnings, compared with 42.9 percent for the average Swede. The Swedes actually tax corporations less… Estate tax? In the United States the average effective rate is 16.5 percent. In Sweden, it’s zero. Swedish national sales taxes, which fall disproportionately on the middle classes, are much higher than sales taxes in the United States. …Some scholars have drawn on this history to argue that the United States needs to give up its fixation with progressive taxation and adopt a national sales tax as every other advanced industrial country has done. …It’s hard to make a case for a big new tax in America on the middle classes and the poor…progressive taxation still has a role to play in the United States — but we do need to learn the larger lesson…the secret of the European welfare states.
Her view of the the “larger lesson” and “secret” is not the same as mine.
She wants an efficient welfare state and – to her credit – she acknowledges that means big tax burdens for lower-income and middle-class households.
I’ll close by emphasizing a point I made at the end of the above video. Our friends on the left like to argue that big government is popular and they’ll cite polling data to make that case.
But people have much different answers to polling questions when they are asked if they are willing to pay higher taxes to finance bigger government.