I'm not on board with this much much lower capital gains rate. It's not investment. I gave a perfect example of how my friend whose family is related to the WSJ spent a tiny amount of his 100M in my business and I actually hired more people, he would be taxed higher than when he parks it in some obscure hedge fund who takes that money offshore.
I just have to politely disagree with some of or guys in that I think reality is very different than the rosey picture painted by how the uber wealthy pay into the system.
I think part of the problem of why you disagree is that (I say this with the highest of respect) I don't believe you really understand how all of it work and correlates.
A capital gains tax applies only to gains invested in:
1) Stocks
2) Bonds
3) Resources and metals
4) Real Estate
So you may say, hey this guy has millions in investments and only pays 15% in capital gains taxes. Yet he doesn't hire anyone, how is he investing and helping the economy.
Well say he invested $4M in investments to each of the 4 categories subject to capital gains taxes.
$1M to stocks. Well what are stocks? When you buy a stock what does that mean? When you buy a stock you are giving money (capital) to a company so they can invest it to make that company grow. When a company wants to grow they need money. A fast way to get money is to offer stocks so people pay them cash in exchange for a small share of "ownership". The company then uses this money to buy machinery, office space, and even hire people. So think about how many people you could hire and how much you could grow if someone gave you $1M in capital to do as you wish. Its the very foundation of how big corporations are built. It's how Microsoft and Apple grew so quickly. If they relied only of the profit and sales of their products it would have taken them 10 times as long to grow to where they are now.
$1M to bonds. Bonds are how projects are done. It's how roads are paved, schools built and bridges made. In order to fund a project, a bond is floated. Basically it's a loan for building construction from an investor. So that $1M investment would mean countless of jobs for paving a road or building a bridge.
$1M in resources/materials. This is things like metals and oil. Buying and selling these commodities is the lifeblood of the entire industry. It supports an entire industry, like mining, which often support entire towns. Think about it, say someone needs to build a bridge and needs tons of steel. But once the project is done I don't need anymore steel. So if I were a producer of steel, how could I hire people for only the few months my customer needs steel and then lay them off once they don't? Here is where the investor comes in. I can keep producing steel at a constant rate, keeping people employed, because a buy (the investor) buys it. The investor then sells it to various bridge builders as they need it, but since investors are in it for the long run (they hold their money in the fund) then it works for everyone. As a manufacturer I can keep people employed because I have a consistent buyer.
$1M in real estate. I think this is the most obvious. If I purchase buildings, houses etc. not only am I supporting the jobs and companies in construction, but I also provide places for people to live, eat, work and play.
So in that regard, you can see how people who invest in things that are subject to capital gains taxes "feed" the economy to a very high degree.