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Our Own Ownership Society
Here's what George W. Bush's second-term agenda should be.
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I want to be among the first to commend the president for choosing as his major domestic theme the "Ownership Society." What could be more important than giving more Americans an opportunity to own assets and build wealth? The president is obviously concerned that ownership in America is now more concentrated in fewer hands than it's been since the days of the robber barons in the late 19th century. The richest 1 percent now own as much as the bottom 90 percent put together.

I can't tell you exactly what he'll propose, but if his goal is to spread the wealth I expect he'll acknowledge that the present tax system isn't fair. People earning over half a million dollars a year are subject to the lowest tax rate in over 50 years, and much of their unearned income isn't being taxed at all. Meanwhile, he'll explain that if you figure in payroll taxes, sales taxes, and property taxes, average working Americans are paying more in taxes than ever before. So in the president's Ownership Society, middle- and lower-income workers will pay less tax. And this won't bust the budget because he'll reverse course and raise taxes on the rich.

I expect the president will also call for massive new federal investments in education, the key to spreading wealth in the new economy. In the Ownership Society, Washington will spend more on the nation's schools than it now spends on Iraq -- starting with universal early-childhood education so the minds of toddlers and pre-Ks are ready to learn, followed by smaller classrooms with fewer students and better-paid, highly-qualified teachers. And access to college for any young person who can make good use of it, regardless of parental income.

Finally, the president will surprise some by saying he's not in favor of privatizing Social Security after all. That would just line the pockets of Wall Street bankers who'd rake in huge fees managing all those private accounts. No, in the Ownership Society, the first $10,000 of income will be exempt from Social Security taxes -- and the president will make up the difference by raising the cap on earnings subject to the tax.

Now I may have some of the details a wrong, but assuming the president is serious about creating an Ownership Society, he'll be announcing initiatives just like these. Won't he?

Robert B. Reich is co-founder of The American Prospect. A version of this column originally appeared on NPR's Marketplace.

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Robert B. Reich, a co-founder of The American Prospect, is a Professor of Public Policy at the Goldman School of Public Policy at the University of California at Berkeley. His website can be found here and his blog can be found here. Click here to read more about Reich.

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