If you tax the wealthy and corporations, you get the revenue every year. Their fair contributions would slash the debt over time. They have had the tax cuts since Reagan. That is when the debt exploded and why it continues. The wealthy write the laws. With this admin, they have complete control. They will get far richer and the wealth gap will get much worse.
Even confiscating 100% of the wealth of America’s millionaires and billionaires would not retire the national debt, based on the most current estimates available as of February 28, 2025.
The U.S. national debt stands at approximately $36 trillion (as reported in late 2024 data from the U.S. Treasury).
The combined wealth of America’s billionaires is estimated at $6.72 trillion, according to Forbes’ analysis at the end of 2024, covering 813 billionaires.
For millionaires (those with a net worth of $1 million or more, excluding billionaires), the Credit Suisse Global Wealth Report projected around 28 million U.S. millionaires by 2025, up from 22 million in 2020. Assuming an average net worth of $2-3 million per millionaire (a rough midpoint, as many hover near the lower end while some reach tens of millions), their total wealth could range from $56 trillion to $84 trillion. However, more conservative estimates, like those from the Federal Reserve’s 2024 data, suggest the total wealth of the top 10% (which includes millionaires and billionaires) is around $100 trillion, with the bottom 90% holding far less.
Adjusting for overlap and realistic millionaire wealth, a combined figure for millionaires and billionaires might land closer to $60-70 trillion.
Even at the high end—say, $70 trillion—this falls short of the $36 trillion national debt by a wide margin when considering practical realities.
Liquidating all that wealth (stocks, real estate, businesses) at full value isn’t feasible; mass sales would crash markets, slashing the actual proceeds.
Historical examples, like forced asset sales during economic crises, show values can drop 50% or more in such scenarios. Plus, the debt grows daily—$1 trillion every 100 days, per 2024 trends—adding roughly $3.65 trillion annually.
So, even if you seized $70 trillion today, the debt could climb back toward $36 trillion in a decade without spending cuts.
Billionaire wealth alone ($6-7 trillion) covers less than a year of federal spending ($6.9 trillion in 2024) or a fraction of the debt.
Adding millionaires boosts the pot but still doesn’t bridge the gap, especially factoring in economic fallout.
The math suggests the U.S.’s fiscal challenge is more about spending than revenue—a point debated across political lines but grounded in the numbers. Confiscation might dent the debt, but retiring it entirely?
Not even close.
@Grok