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California millionaire explains why he backs billionaire tax

(The Center Square) – In the days after a union-backed measure to tax California’s billionaires surpassed more than 1 million signatures, a millionaire from the Golden State spoke out in favor of the initiative.

“It’s a very important step in the right direction,” Scott Ellis, a Silicon Valley millionaire and former Hewlett-Packard executive, told The Center Square in an exclusive interview. “I really think our society is thinking and talking about wealth wrong, and has been for decades, so I think we need to reframe the conversation starting with how much wealth is enough.”

As Californians get closer to the Nov. 3 ballot measure on the billionaire tax, it’s important to ask how much wealth is enough or too much and what happens when people are too rich, Ellis said. He noted questions include defining financial success.

“That’s why I’m very happy to see real measures making it to the ballot to explore this issue,” Ellis said.

As the wealthiest people in society accumulate increasing amounts of money, Ellis said, not enough people are looking at the high end of the wealth spectrum. He said that leaves many on the lower end struggling.

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“I really feel like we’re missing the right starting point,” Ellis said. “I think the starting point really should be ‘What does financial success look like?’ I would like a society where those who are struggling are taken care of and doing well. I would like a society where people have opportunity to innovate and work hard, and I want a world where people have the opportunity for financial success, to pursue a better life for themselves and their families.”

Financial success could look like earning enough money to not have to work, Ellis said. He noted two nice homes that are paid in full, end-of-life expenses that are covered and having a fairly luxurious existence could all be indicators of financial success.

“If you just do the cash flow forecasts, $30 million gives you that,” Ellis said.

However, not everyone buys the argument that $30 million is the most money any one person should have.

“If they wanted to give more money, they should just give more of their own dollars,” Assemblymember David Tangipa, R-Fresno, told The Center Square. “This is where when people are providing value to society. Now it’s saying that they’ve provided too much value, so therefore, we must take from you. I don’t think that’s a good position to be in.”

Tangipa also said he sees the tax on billionaires as just another example of government coming in and trying to take assets of those who have accumulated wealth.

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“In the state of California, where we have a sales tax, income tax, property tax and tax on everything that you have, it is an insatiable hunger for other people’s resources,” Tangipa said.

Ellis’ and Tangipa’s remarks followed the submission of 1.5 million signatures for the California Billionaire Tax Act, a measure that the Golden State’s voters will consider on the Nov. 3 ballot. The union backing the measure, the Service Employees International Union – United Healthcare Workers West, submitted the signatures on April 27. If passed, the measure would levy a one-time 5% tax on residents with more than $1 billion in wealth. Assets like stocks, bonds and artwork would be subject to the tax, according to previous reporting by The Center Square.

The union wants to use the roughly $100 billion the tax could generate to help shore up funding for K-12 schools and public healthcare programs. Both have experienced significant federal budget cuts in the last year.

According to research from the University of Missouri, California is an ideal place for a tax on billionaires because of the number who live there. The university said the state is home to 27% of the country’s billionaires, who claim 12% of the population of the United States. The highest income earners in the state have seen their wealth grow 158% over the last three years, the research showed.

That totals $2.2 trillion in wealth, according to both that study and the SEIU.

The Center Square reached out to Democrats in the California Legislature, who did not respond on Thursday.

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