
CNBC anchors Joe Kernan and Becky Quick pressed former Biden administration official Bharat Ramamurti on Vice President Kamala Harrisâ support for taxing âunrealizedâ capital gains taxes Wednesday.
Harris endorsed a plan to tax unrealized capital gains for those with more than $100 million in assets, according to The Wall Street Journal. Quick raised an objection to that proposal after Ramamurti claimed it would only target about 60,000 Americans.
âMy biggest problem is with unrealized gains. You can go back again and say itâs only for people make over $100,000. That clearly doesnât impact me, itâs not going to be an issue for me,â Quick said. âWhen the first â American income tax was put in place in 1861, it was a flat 3% tax on all incomes over $800. We know how that has changed over time. Unrealized gains, taxing unrealized gains just doesnât seem fair in any sense of the word, but in the very best sense, taxing unrealized gains all youâre doing is pulling forward taxes that would be paid later when someone actually sells the stock.â
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âI think that this reaction to unrealized gains is a little funny given that I bet that the majority of people watching right now are already paying a tax on unrealized gains. Itâs called a property tax,â Ramamurti responded.
Quick and âSquawk Boxâ co-host Joe Kernen took umbrage to the comments.
âProperty tax?â Kernen scoffed.
âA property tax is a use tax, itâs a use tax, youâre paying for schools,â Quick said as a back-and-forth soon emerged.
Ramamurti continued to argue Harrisâ proposal was akin to a property tax as Quick pointed out how stocks fluctuate in value.
âItâs probably unconstitutional,â Kernen said. âAnd itâs never gonna happen, probably.â
âItâs not income,â Quick interjected.
Democratic Sen. Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts introducedlegislation in 2021 that established a wealth tax on those with more than $50 million in assets.
(Featured Image Media Credit:Â Screenshot/Rumble/CNBC)
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