Daniel R. Amerman, CFA,
InflationIntoWealth.com
Overview
US presidential candidate Barack
Obama has proposed increasing the capital gains tax from 15% to 25%. Unfortunately, the
biggest component of investment taxes during inflationary times is not taxation
of economic income, but taxation of the government’s destruction of the value
of its own currency. As we will explore
in the article below, the 1-2 combination of higher inflation and higher
investment taxes may mean a quadrupling of the effective real tax rate in 2009. This
will have the effect of turning the capital gains tax into an effective asset
tax, where all real economic earnings plus a percentage of investment principal
are taken through taxation – unless investors take self-defense measures.
Please note that this is a
nonpartisan article about finance and economics, with no political judgments
made, and with implications that go far beyond just the United States. The heart of the problem for the coming years
is the bipartisan problem of impossible promises that the United States government
has made for Social Security and Medicare – promises with equivalents that are
even more impossible in many other developed nations. At some time over the coming years, regardless
of who is elected, either:
a)
Taxes
must climb to confiscatory levels; or
b)
Promises
to retirees must increasingly be broken; or
c)
The
currency must be destroyed (through monetizing the deficits without sufficiently
raising taxes), or
d)
All
of the above
The Essence of Inflation Taxes
The essence of inflation is that the
value of the dollar (and other currencies) is worth less every year. To keep the same net worth means that you
have to earn enough money that year to offset the loss in purchasing power of
your investment. Briefly, if you have a
$100,000 investment, and inflation takes 10% of your purchasing power, then at
the end of the year, your $100,000 will only buy $90,000 worth of goods and
services.
$100,000 - $10,000 inflation loss =
$90,000 purchasing power
To break-even then, you must earn
$10,000.
$100,000 - $10,000 inflation loss +10,000
earnings =
$100,000
purchasing power
To achieve a real profit – you must
earn more. So that if you want to come
out ahead by $4,000, then you have to earn $14,000 instead of $10,000, to
compensate for your (very real) inflation loss.
$100,000 - $10,000 inflation loss +$14,000
real earnings =
$104,000
purchasing power
Moving our need for investment
returns from 4% up to 14% just to achieve a real return of 4% in what our
investment will buy for us is challenging enough. Unfortunately, we have been leaving out a
rather important “technicality” – we don’t keep what we earn, we keep what we
earn after paying taxes. And the
government doesn’t see $4,000 in income in our simple example above – but $14,000
in income, all of which is taxable. Effectively,
the government taxes us not just on our real earnings, but on the government’s
destruction of the value of its own currency.
The amount of damage inflicted by
this grossly unfair inflation tax is based on the combination of three
factors: the inflation rate, the tax
rate, and the real (after-inflation) return on investment. Using historical statistics, we will demonstrate
below that the existence of the inflation tax means that the average person has
achieved much lower real returns over previous decades than usually stated –
and the situation is likely on the verge of getting much worse, perhaps four
times worse within the year.
The Past: Lower Inflation, Lower Tax Rates
(For
this analysis of the real effects of increasing capital gains tax rates during
a time of increasing inflation, we will use a methodology developed at more
length in the article “Real Investment Tax Rate Is 256% Higher Than
Stated”. Hopefully, the methodology will
be clear even without reading this earlier article.)
For our historical case, we will say
that as an owner of the economy, an average investor earned the average
economic growth rate of the economy in real terms. This has been equal to about 3% on average in
real terms – meaning after the effects of inflation have been subtracted
(source:
United States Bureau of Economic Analysis, q3 1972 to q3 2007). Over the last 35 years, inflation has
cumulatively destroyed 80% of the value of the dollar (source: United States Bureau of
Labor Statistics, 9/72 – 9/07). This
80% destruction of the value of a dollar (meaning a 2007 dollar will only buy
what 20 cents did in 1972), is equal to a 4.7% annual drop in the value of a
dollar, which is another way of saying our historical inflation rate averaged
4.7%.
If you owned investment assets that
generated the same 3% after-inflation return that the overall economy did
during those years, then there was really only one way to do so. You had to do the same thing the overall
economy did from 1972 to 2007, and grow by a rate of 7.7% per year in total
terms. It is a very simple
relationship: the economy grows by 7.7%
per year in simple (nominal) dollar terms, we subtract 4.7% per year because
that is how much of the value of our dollars is being destroyed by inflation
each year, and we are left with 3% real growth.
(The relationships are actually multiplicative, not additive, but we’re
keeping things simple, for better communication.)
In other words, you take your
starting dollars, add your total returns, subtract how much of the value of
your starting dollars was destroyed by inflation, and you are left with your
real pre-tax gain (or loss). Not in
simple dollars, but in purchasing power, or what those dollars will really buy
for you.
Note the above key words
“pre-tax”. What happens when we add the
effect of taxes to the picture? When we
take the current capital gains tax rate of 15% (which has not been constant
over the last 35 years), what we get is the graph below:
As illustrated above, we take 3% in
real income, add 4.7% in inflation, and we have a total return of 7.7%, or
$7,700 in historical income and/or asset appreciation (which, by no coincidence,
is not all that far off from what historical financial asset investment returns
were over that time period). Take off 15%
taxes of $1,155, and we are keeping 85% of the income, or $6,545. Seems straightforward enough, and that is
exactly what appears on our tax returns, and in our checking and brokerage
accounts. We make a 7.7% rate of return,
or $7,700, we keep 85% of that return, and we pay out 15% in taxes to the
government.
Except… that last bar on the right is a bit
troubling. On the far left, our graph
shows $3,000 in real pre-tax income. When
we deduct the annual $4,700 loss on the value of our investment assets due to
inflation’s steady destruction of the value of a dollar, earning $7,700 does
leave us coming out only $3,000 ahead each year. However, on the right, our after-tax share of
that $3,000 in growth is only $1,845. If
we were truly paying only a 15% tax rate, then we would owe $450 in taxes on
our $3,000 in real income, and would keep $2,550. This is shown on the bottom line of the chart
beneath the graph, as well as the light blue portions of the bars.
Now take another look at that tax
bar. Most of it is red, not blue. What that shows is that we have to pay taxes
on the money we earn just to keep up with the government’s steady destruction
of the value of it’s own currency. The
80% destruction of the value of the dollar between 1972 and 2007 worked out to
a 4.7% annual loss, and if we were to just run in place, and keep up with that
destruction, we had to earn 4.7%. The $705
in taxes on the 4.7% of illusory earnings that really just maintains the
starting value of our portfolio in purchasing power terms (the red bar) are
about 1.5 X higher than the $450 taxes on our real (after-inflation) earnings
(the blue bar). So, when we add taxes on
inflation to taxes on real income, then our total taxes of $1,155 are about 2.5
X larger than the nominal tax rate.
Click Here To Learn About A Free Mini Course That Will Teach You How To Turn Inflation Into Wealth. |
Meaning that we are only keeping 62%
of economic growth, and the government has been taking not 15%, but 38% of the
real growth in the economy through taxes.
For the past 35 years, using official economic growth and inflation
statistics, our effective tax rate has been about 2.5 X the official capital
gains tax rate. (All of the steps are explained in more detail in the previous article
referenced, “Real Investment Tax Rate Is 256% Higher Than Stated”.)
Reality, Not Economic Abstraction
If you’ve been an investor for many
years, and it doesn’t seem like your real wealth, the purchasing power of your
savings, has compounded like the newspaper columnists say it should have, or
the financial planning models had predicted – this is why. The conventional financial planning approach,
which ignores the effect of inflation taxes, is at its core, based entirely on
the mathematics of exponential compounding.
What inflation taxes do, even at moderate levels, is slash the rate of
compounding.
If you take the economically naďve
(but almost universally practiced) approach of compounding 7.7% for 35 years,
then $1.00 becomes $13.41. Such is the
magic of compound interest and financial planning! However, if you take the real world approach
of looking at what your savings dollars will buy, after you’ve paid (only) 15%
in taxes, then our after-inflation and after-tax compounding rate is 1.8%. When we compound 1.8% for 35 years, then $1.00
becomes worth $1.87. Meaning $11.54 out
of our magical $12.41 in exponentially compounded wealth just went “poof” and
disappeared.
This is no economist’s abstraction. The average price of an average house in June of 1972 was about $18,000 and the price of a gallon of gas in 1972 was 36 cents. Life and money do not get any more real than the difference between those prices then, and the prices we pay today.
The Future: Higher Inflation, Higher Tax Rates
You may have noticed several things
about our historical analysis that don’t quite jibe with conditions today. Such as, even official government statistics
are increasingly showing a rate of inflation that is surging out of
control. As of June of 2008, the yearly Producer
Price Index, the official measure of wholesale inflation rate reached 9.2%,
which was the highest 12 month rate of inflation experienced since 1981. (The figure was much worse for June alone,
with a 1.8% monthly price rise, which would be over a 21% rate of inflation if
annualized). The July official
measure of consumer inflation (the CPI) was less at 5.6% and a “mere” 17 year
high, but consumer inflation levels tend to follow wholesale inflation levels. More importantly, it is getting harder and
harder to find people who completely believe government inflation statistics,
particularly those retirees who pay real bills based upon real price levels
every month, even as the size of their checks are adjusted by the “official”
inflation rate . (More on the powerful
incentives for the government to subtly and not so subtly manipulate the way
inflation is calculated, and the way that the pressure will build for still
greater manipulations as the Boomers retire, can be found in my article “Inflation Index Manipulation: Theft By Statistics”.)
So let’s call the current real rate
of inflation 10%, with that estimate likely being on the low side.
Another difference is that our
economy is in many ways looking more like the 1970s right now, than it does the
1990s. Again, official government
measures (in an election year) claim that the United States is not in a
recession, but many people (perhaps most people) believe otherwise.
The short term issues of a recession
in 2008 and 2009 are not the larger problem – which is that we have an aging
population. A long-term economic
slowdown caused by an aging population is not a particularly controversial
assumption but fairly widely expected among economists. Indeed, even Benjamin Bernanke is on the
record as saying (in an October 4, 2006 speech to the Washington Economist
Club):
“In coming decades, many forces will shape our economy and our society, but in all likelihood no single factor will have as pervasive an effect as the aging of our population.”
“…the aging of the population is likely to lead to lower average living standards than those that would have been experienced without this demographic change”
“…each worker’s output will have to be shared among more people. Thus, all else being the same, the expected declines in labor force participation will reduce per capita real GDP and thus per capita consumption relative to what they would have been without population aging.”
A long-term reduction to a 1.5% -
2.0% real growth rate in the GDP is not particularly controversial among
economists, so we will assume an economic growth slowdown to about 2% a year in
real terms.
Finally, we have that very important
consideration of what tax rates will be.
Which brings us back to the start of our article, the 2008 election, and
the proposed increase in the capital gains tax to 25%.
So start with the highest official inflation rate in 27 years, and round up just a notch. Add in the projected reduction in long-term real economic growth rates, as expected by the Chairman of the Federal Reserve, among others. Add in the increase in taxes being proposed by the presidential candidate currently leading in the polls. Take this combination of what could almost be called quasi-official numbers (and cases can be made for each of the three assumptions that they could turn out far worse in the next several years ahead), mix them together, and we get the chart below:
The first difference between this
and the historical chart is that there is a lot more red. Not only in the inflation column, but the tax
column as well. An inflation rate of 10%
means that for a $100,000 investment you need to earn at least $10,000 over the
year, just to have your money be worth the same as it was when you started the
year. A lower rate of economic growth
means that most investments that are based on the economy (and most are, in one
form or another) won’t be earning quite as much in real terms - $2,000 for this
illustration, instead of $3,000.
To achieve this $2,000 real gain – we
need to earn $12,000. Any less, and we
don’t get a real gain. For instance,
earn just $6,000, then take off $10,000 for the dollar being worth 90 cents at
the end of the year, and you didn’t make $6,000, but lost $4,000. Make $9,000, then take off $10,000, then you just
lost $1,000 in real terms. (The earnings
themselves also need to be discounted for inflation, but we’re trying to keep
it simple here.)
Even though we are earning less
money in real terms ($2,000 versus $3,000), the amount of nominal income that
we are taking in has risen substantially, from $7,700 to $12,000. Which means that our taxable income just
jumped substantially. Just in time for a
substantial increase in the taxes on capital gains. Uh oh.
If we pay 25% tax on $12,000 in
taxable earnings, then our taxes are $3,000.
Of which, as shown in the chart, only $500 is real after-inflation
earnings, and $2,500 is taxes on your attempts just to maintain the purchasing
power of the assets that you started the tax year with. In other words, the government’s tax on the
destruction of the value of its own currency is a full 5 X larger than the tax
on your real (after-inflation) earnings.
(It’s almost a little hard to see the blue of taxes on real income in
the tax bar of the graph, because it is dwarfed by the inflation taxes that
constitute 83% of the tax burden.)
Unfortunately, as you only had
$2,000 in real earnings to begin with, but your taxes are $3,000 – you end the
year with a $1,000 loss in the after-tax and after-inflation value of your
savings (12% earnings less 3% in taxes is 9% net – but the value of your money
dropped 10%, so you are 1% behind). This
is shown on the graph by the light blue bar falling beneath the $0 mark. What the current rate of inflation does, when
combined with a higher capital gains tax rate, or existing ordinary income tax
rates, is to not only confiscate 100% of your real earnings, but actually take
some of the starting value of your assets as well.
Now, keep in mind that you really
did make money pre-tax in this example, just as we would expect the sum of all
investors to make money in an economy that is growing. But because, with a sufficiently high rate of
inflation - like we are experiencing
today - the government fully taxes illusory income (income that does
not exist in purchasing power or inflation-adjusted terms), that means that the
government is able to not only seize all economic gains, but to also help
themselves to part of the value of your starting assets.
Compare the effective tax rates in the chart below:
While you may not be used to seeing
financial results presented in this manner, the chart above is not that
difficult to follow, nor are our assumptions unrealistic. Just take the highest official inflation rate
in 27 years, add in a projected reduction in long-term real economic growth
rates for an aging population, and modify for the increase in taxes being
proposed by a leading presidential candidate.
Again, this is no abstract theory, nor
speculations about the distant future.
This is real and this is today.
For one example of how it could be worse, let’s assume we are in a real
recession (as we are), and we lose 2% a year in real terms, even as inflation
is at 10%. What that means is that our
nominal income becomes 8% a year (10% - 2%).
However, the government does not include the inflation losses that occur
as a result of its monetary and fiscal policies, but fully taxes you on the 8%,
either at the (proposed) new capital gains tax rate of around 25%, or at a
higher ordinary income tax rate. So you pay
2% of your net worth in taxes for the privilege of losing 2% on your
investments.
The higher the rate of inflation, and the higher the tax rate, the more not only of income, but of your investment principal, that the government takes each year. This is illustrated in the chart below, where the red blocks all show confiscatory tax levels (all real income is taken, as so is part of the initial investment value).
Compounding The Problem
Let’s go back to our example of the
discrepancy between nominal compounding rates (“nominal” meaning inflation is
not taken into account), and real after-tax and after-inflation
compounding. If we simply take the naďve
approach of compounding our 12% annual earnings, then $1.00 becomes worth
$52.80 in 35 years! This $51.80 in
compounded wealth is much better than the mere $12.41 we saw with 7.7%
compounding, even if we do have to discount more inflation (or so most people
would see it.)
However, when we do explicitly
consider the intertwined effects of higher inflation and higher tax rates on
inflation, then as we saw, our real after-tax and after-inflation return drops
to a negative 1% per year. When we
compound a negative 1% return for 35 years, then a dollar becomes worth 70
cents. So not only does our entire $51.80
in exponentially compounded wealth disappear, but the real purchasing power of
30% of our starting savings has gone as well.
In other words – the higher the rate
of inflation, the more mistakes that will be made by the average investor, and
the more disastrous the consequences for those who fail to understand these
principles. The higher the inflation
rate, the higher the financial price that you personally may pay for not
knowing the principles for self-defense from inflation taxes.
As stated in the introduction, this is a non-political article about an intensely political subject. What creates the inflation tax is inflation, and Obama certainly can’t be personally blamed for the long series of decisions that have led to the current inflationary crisis, nor can he be blamed for decades of impossible promises made to future retirees, that have created the looming Social Security, Medicare and pension crises. Simply refusing to raise taxes – without accompanying draconian cuts in future social benefits - has its own problems, because that approach accelerates the destruction of the value of the dollar through increasing inflation rates as government deficits are effectively monetized. There is no simple way out of the dilemma we all face, and while the particular choices made by whoever wins this and the following elections will be crucially important to determining how these factors play out in the future, these factors will exist regardless of who is elected. Indeed, the issues involved go far beyond the current presidential campaign in the United States, these relationships between real tax rates and inflation, are a problem with implications for many political parties across many nations.
Four Times The Penalty – Four Times
The Benefits
As shown in the chart that compared
historical and near future inflation tax rates, the real tax rate on capital
gains next year may be four times higher than the average tax rate of the last
several decades. Every time you see another banner headline
that talks about the highest inflation rate in 17 years or 27 years – keep in
mind that your real tax rate is jumping with every one of those headlines (even
absent any increase in the nominal capital gains tax rate). That said, what can you do?
An excellent first step is to start
by choosing asset classes that offer genuine inflation protection – and
tangible assets are a good choice.
However, tangible assets by themselves are as vulnerable to inflation taxes
as any other kind of investments. To
beat inflation taxes requires another essential step – and that is quite simply
education. For something else goes up
when the effective tax rate climbs by a factor of four - the cost of being
unaware and uneducated just rose by four times.
If you are unaware, then your relationship
with inflation taxes will be the same as most of the population – an unknowing
victim.
The good news is that if you are
fully aware of inflation taxes, and are willing to take personal action with
your knowledged, then some of the powerful wealth destroying effects of this
most unfair of taxes can be reduced or neutralized. Indeed, inflation taxes can be reversed,
and in some circumstances, used as an actual wealth creation tool.
To achieve this ability will first
require looking inflation straight in the eye and saying: “Inflation, you are likely to play a big role
in my personal future, and instead of ignoring you or thoughtlessly flailing
away at you – I will study you and your ways.
I will learn the deeply unfair ways in which you redistribute wealth,
and the counterintuitive lessons about how some investors will be destroyed by
inflation and repeatedly pay taxes for the privilege, even while other
investors are claiming real wealth on a tax-free basis. I will learn to position myself so that you
redistribute wealth to me, and the worse the financial devastation you wreak –
the more my personal real net worth grows.
I will examine the official blindness to inflation within government tax
policy that creates the Inflation Tax, and instead of raging or despairing, I will understand that a blind opponent is
a weak opponent, and I will take advantage your blindness and use tax policy to
multiply my real wealth.”
(This is the shorter version of a
longer article. The longer version is
available through the free Turning Inflation Into Wealth mini-course.)
Do you know how to Turn Inflation Into Wealth? To position yourself so that inflation will
redistribute real wealth to you, and the higher the rate of inflation – the
more your after-inflation net worth grows?
Do you know how to achieve these gains on a long-term and tax-advantaged
basis? Do you know how to potentially
triple your after-tax and after-inflation returns through Reversing The
Inflation Tax? So that instead
of paying real taxes on illusionary income, you are paying illusionary taxes on
real increases in net worth? These are
among the many topics covered in the free “Turning Inflation Into
Wealth” Mini-Course. Starting simple,
this course delivers a series of 10-15 minute readings, with each
reading building on the knowledge and information contained in previous
readings. More information on the course
is available at InflationIntoWealth.com .
Contact Information:
Daniel R. Amerman, CFA
Website: http://InflationIntoWealth.com/
E-mail: mail@the-great-retirement-experiment.com
This essay and the websites, mini-course, books and audio
recordings, contain the ideas and opinions of the author. They are
conceptual explorations of general economic principles, and how people may – or
may not – interact in the future. As with any discussion of the future,
there cannot be any absolute certainty. What this website does not
contain is specific investment, legal or any other form of professional
advice. If specific advice is needed, it should be sought from an
appropriate professional. Any liability, responsibility or warranty for
the results of the application of principles contained in the website,
pamphlets, recordings, books and other products, either directly or indirectly,
are expressly disclaimed by the author.