Why Chase Taylor Swift? Stop the Corporate Looting That Makes Billionaires

Yves here. This article argues that wealth taxes are far too late an intervention to tackle the problem of ever-widening income inequality. It’s that the system is set up to allow too much extraction by corporate executives and shareholders, particularly via share buybacks, which allow companies to manipulate equity prices by not investing in the business of their business. Some indicators: in the early 2000s, Warren Buffett declared the corporate profit share of GPD, then at about 6%, to be unsustainably high. It has been at close to twice that level in recent years. Similarly, someone who goes into asset management is twice as likely to become a billionaire as a counterpart who works in tech.

By Lynn Parramore, Senior Research Analyst at the Institute for New Economic Thinking. Originally published at the Institute for New Economic Thinking website

Targeting billionaires with California’s proposed wealth tax is an eye-catching idea, but perhaps the real problem is how some of these people become billionaires in the first place.

California has long eyed taxing the ultra-rich. In 2024, Assembly Bill 259, backed by progressive Democrats and unions like the California Federation of Teachers, sought annual wealth taxes but was blocked by centrist Democrats, business groups, and Governor Newsom.

Now, advocates are going for a one-time 5% levy on roughly 200 billionaires, covering everything they own — stocks, businesses, art, private islands, personal spacecraft, even intellectual property – basically the whole enchilada if they were state residents on January 1, 2026. SEIU United Healthcare Workers West estimates the tax could raise $100 billion for health and social services.

Backers call it a fair share. Critics cite economic, legal, and retroactive risks.

To many, the logic seems straightforward: billionaires have absurd, even toxic amounts of money. The richest 1% now own more than the bottom 90% combined. Economists Emmanuel Saez and Gabriel Zucman note that middle- and working-class Americans often pay higher effective tax rates than the super-rich, whose California fortunes grew over $2 trillion in just a few years.

Why not tax them?

But Here’s the Twist

Economist William Lazonick, a long-time critic of the way many U.S. corporations are run, argues that targeting individual fortunes treats the symptom, not the disease. The real engine of inequality is structural: corporate and financial practices that concentrate wealth among shareholders while short-changing other stakeholders who should be benefiting from corporate profits — and too often creating little of real value to society.

Most billionaires don’t “earn” their fortunes through work. They build wealth by owning stock in corporations. Executives and boards pump up dividends and stock prices, often using stock buybacks, which rocket their own pay into the stratosphere. Managers and professionals with stock options or stock awards can cash in too – but only if they keep their jobs. Everyone else — most workers and the wider public that depends on taxing corporate profits to fund schools, roads, and healthcare — gets left behind.

This shareholder-first model (famously called “the dumbest idea in the world” by former GE CEO Jack Welch), encourages executives and investors to treat companies like giant ATMs, pulling money out rather than reinvesting profits to create lasting value.

Consider Mark Zuckerberg. Nearly all of his mind-boggling fortune—the kind that just bought him a record-smashing $170 million mansion in Miami-Dade County near Jared Kushner and Ivanka Trump, and is funding a bombproof bunker/complex in Kauai that disturbs local wildlife —comes straight from owning stock in Meta Platforms. Meta has spent nearly $200 billion on stock buybacks in the past five years. Those buybacks have fattened the wallets of shareholders, including Meta’s top executives and professionals, while leaving the rest of society out of the gains (Meta is famous for its tax-dodging schemes). With Meta, there aren’t any hedge-fund activists forcing Zuckerberg to do buybacks – they’re happening by choice.

Lazonick points out that “with all the profits that they have, they could be creating stable, high-paid jobs for the workers whom they employ—and thereby put in place powerful social conditions for collective and cumulative learning.” He adds, “Instead they are using stock-based pay, which is always volatile and which results in unstable and inequitable employment, to compete for talent.”

Now, even some of Meta’s highest-paid employees are feeling the squeeze. With stock-based pay being cut back and the AI revolution changing work, some of the people who once seemed untouchable are discovering that their jobs aren’t as secure as they thought.

Then there’s Tim Cook. Much of his wealth comes from stock-based compensation tied to the stock-market performance of Apple Inc. Under his leadership as CEO, Apple’s so-called “Capital Return Program” has spent hundreds of billions on stock buybacks – north of half a trillion dollars when counting programs from the early 2010s on — which have helped push up the share price and richly rewarded executives and shareholders. Lazonick has criticized this trend, arguing that Apple’s huge buybacks reward shareholders who have never provided finance to the company, instead of investing in value-creating workers who are the source of innovation. This is the activity that has Cook extremely rich—though he still buys his underwear on sale at Nordstrom, so it’s not entirely clear why he needs all this money.

His workers could sure use a bigger cut. It is a fact that many of the workers who build, sell, or support Apple products have faced stingy pay and labor issues: some retail employees have pushed for higher minimum wages and better benefits as recently as 2022, and labor-rights groups have documented low wages and complaints about conditions among Apple’s supply-chain workers.

A one-time CA wealth tax might dent the personal fortunes of the Zuckerbergs and Cooks, but it does nothing to slow the corporate machinery that grinds on to produce still more of them.

Historically, reformers recognized this issue. For example, Thorstein Veblen critiqued the ways elites could extract wealth while contributing less to society than might be expected. And early 20th-century progressives championed higher corporate taxes and antitrust laws because they understood that inequality was more structural than individual.

This is what 19th-century critic John Ruskin had in mind when he coined the term “illth.” For Ruskin, true wealth, or “weal,” promotes everyone’s health and prosperity. Illth, by contrast, amasses when money is extracted or hoarded without focusing on social value. Stock buybacks and ownership stakes that line-the pockets of executives at the expense of employees, communities, or innovation are a modern form of illth.

We don’t want illth.

Taylor Swift Isn’t the Problem

Now let’s bring in someone we can all relate to — Taylor Swift. Her fortune comes from her creativity, work, and audience engagement. She writes songs, records albums, tours, sells merchandise, and negotiates brand deals. Yes, corporate structures like Ticketmaster’s oligopoly complicate matters — but Swift herself isn’t the CEO of a company extracting illth through financial engineering. Taxing her personal wealth dramatizes the issue without addressing its source.

Policies aimed at corporate engines of inequality, rather than individual fortunes, could reshape the system itself. Lazonick and others have recommended a variety of approaches:

· Ban stock buybacks and suppress predatory value extraction. This curbs wealth concentration at the top.

· Encourage employee ownership or provide employee representation on corporate boards. Gains should benefit a broader group of stakeholders – not just shareholders.

· Reimagine corporate governance. Move towards stakeholder models balancing shareholder yields with social and environmental responsibility.

And last, but not least:

· Strengthen progressive corporate taxation. Close loopholes that allow extreme wealth accumulation.

As Lazonick sees it, whether it happens at the federal, state, or local level, government, policy should focus on curbing predatory value extraction and promoting what he calls “progressive value creation”—which means passing laws to stop corporations from being looted, a key source of the exploding wealth of the mega-rich. “From this position of regulatory power,” he advises, “we should then decide how the top 0.1% should be taxed.”

The real work, from this perspective, is reforming the structures that concentrate wealth. If we want an economy that fosters health, innovation, and opportunity instead of illth, chasing Taylor Swift won’t cut it. We need to start regulating the corporate engines behind her peers’ billions.

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14 comments

  1. Michaelmas

    A pedagogical tax: Why the rich should be uber-taxed

    Brank Milanovic, Feb 11, 2026
    https://branko2f7.substack.com/p/a-pedagogical-tax

    Essentially, Milanovic proposes a social credit system for billionaires. As follows, forex —

    If you fly too many times per year by private jets, take private yacht voyages or spend too many days in exclusive resorts (all of which can be readily defined), you are taxed by between 1 and 2 percent of your net wealth.

    If you contribute any amount in excess of $1,000 to any political cause (whether directly to a politician for campaign or to a lobbying firm or to an NGO), you can do that, but depending on the tax schedule, you may be changed between 1 and 5 percent of your net wealth.

    If you contribute any amount in excess of $1,000 to any media organization or if you own a media organization (like Bloomberg, The Washington Post, The Atlantic or X/Twitter), you will be taxed by between 1 and 5 percent of your net wealth.

    If you contribute more than $100,000 to any non-political educational, health or cultural cause, you may get a tax discount (again depending on the amount and the case) between 1 and 3 percent of your net wealth.

  2. The Heretic

    Be careful if you attack Taylor Swift; one angry word from her and you could have a global teenage girl jihad against any of her enemies!

    1. Henry Moon Pie

      Yeah, let’s take it easy on Taylor. She, like me, had to endure a very unhappy NFL season last year.

  3. JoeSixPack

    “Taylor Swift Isn’t the Problem”

    Oh contraire. Taylor Swift sells the image of female empowerment and is anything but. She is a snake oil salesman that serves the interests of the rich, elite, and is one of them. The notion that her success came from hard-work, blood, sweat and tears is extremely misleading. She comes from money. Her parents are connected. That’s how she got record deals.

    It is also tone deaf to say taxing billionaires will not help and that all you need is systemic change, knowing full well that systemic change will never happen.

    How many members of Congress support:
    · Ban stock buybacks and suppress predatory value extraction.
    · Encourage employee ownership or provide employee representation on corporate boards.
    · Reimagine corporate governance.

    Seriously, you might be able to ban stock buybacks, but it won’t stop stock options. No corporation will go for employee ownership and re-imagining corporate governance is pie in the sky because all those members of corporate governance boards are CEOs.

    Believe it or not, there is more political will to tax billionaires. Grudgingly politicians will pass a tax rather than change the entire system. Lynn Parramore and Lazonick are arguing for changing the system. No Republican and no Democrat will do that. But many rank and file Republicans and Democrats, as well as a majority of voters, support a wealth tax. This is doable. Think of it as a short term strategy. Long term, change the system. Short term, tax the billionaires.

    1. T_Reg

      Furthermore, an aggressive wealth tax of, say, 10% annually would begin to make the abundance of systemic manipulation moot.

  4. herman_sampson

    My little-informed opinion is that since most for-profit corporations are charted in Delaware, you need almost a revolution in that state to change charters to enforce a social-good emphasis on corporations -and this would have to be done almost simultaneously in the other 49 states. A return to the 19th century philosophy of incorporation of for-profit enterprises.

  5. voislav

    Sigh. This is where I get frustrated, it’s not an either/or situation, we can do a wealth tax and then do other things as well. So the framing should be “wealth tax is a good start, here are other things that are necessary”, not “wealth tax bad” .

  6. Deschain

    The problem with banning stock buybacks is it just makes M&A even more likely, which is worse.

    1. Yves Smith Post author

      That is not correct. The monster M&A boom of the 1980s followed the SEC ending its ban on stock buybacks in 1982. M&A activity became so frenzied that in 1987, Goldman estimate that 75% of the runup in stock price indexes before the crash was attributable to M&A activity.

      1. Deschain

        I think both (the legalizing of buybacks and the M&A boom) were a function of neoliberal theories taking control of governance. And in the 40 years since then, things have gone a lot further in that direction, with capital’s share of GDP having risen much further.

        Today’s average CEO has an extremely itchy trigger finger when it comes to cash sitting in the balance sheet. Buying back stock is lower risk/work than M&A. But if you take buybacks off the table, that cash is going to be put to work doing something else.

        You have to address the issue at the root, which is lowering capital’s share of the economy. Don’t leave CEOs with huge piles of cash sitting around in the first place.

  7. John9

    Wealth tax, structural regs, etc are all down stream of the one dollar one vote democracy in which we live. As long as money equals speech and corporations equal people nothing will change. Until Citizens United is reversed or revoked legislatively, nothing will change.
    There is a class war that the overlord Epstein Class have been winning seriously for about 40 years. They understand this completely. All their politics is about confusion and distraction from this fact.

    1. Mary C Gross

      Agreed, CU is the current tool for the long standing problem of the wealthy buying access to public opinion. Progressive corporation-reform work has worn ruts in the ground and is spinning its wheels. We need a corporate death penalty that sues board members and stakeholders and limits BM’s ability to serve on other boards.

      Decades of insufficient financial judgements show that violating laws is just a modality of doing business.

  8. Tedder

    The real cause of wealth inequality is poor taxation policies and without finding better means, there will be no end of the billionaire “Epstein Class”, which is a general category for parasites.
    Michael Hudson proposes taxing “economic rent”, the returns that come from financialization, including land rent, but also interest payments, financial fees, monopoly pricing, and intellectual property fees. The so-called “carried interest” has been a means for avoiding taxes for years.
    Basically, by not taxing sufficiently, rich people gain more and more power and use that to influence elections, buy politicians, and enact policy that increases their wealth.
    Only by a ruthless taxation system that eliminates rewards from financial rent and by a ruthless inheritance taxation system that eliminates inherited wealth, will our people thrive and prosper.

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