“Trumpcare is really a tax break for the rich, not a health care program,” Sen. Chuck Schumer of New York said about the Republican House bill to decimate the Affordable Care Act. He was right.

Sen. Rand Paul, meanwhile, panned the bill for not cutting those taxes fast enough. “It keeps the Obamacare taxes for a year,” the Kentucky Republican complained.

It’s old news that Republican plans to basically kill Obamacare would hit Trump country the hardest. In Kentucky, for example, Obamacare brought coverage to a half-million people (out of a population of 4.4 million) — with four in five joining the expanded Medicaid program because their incomes were so low.

But there’s a flip side to this story. This upward transfer of wealth would help already-rich regions get fatter. And few would do better than Schumer country.

New York City accounts for less than 3 percent of the nation’s population but 12 percent of individuals with at least $30 million in net assets. And that’s not including the fabulously flush suburbs.

The House bill would vaporize the taxes that pay for Obamacare. Half the value of these tax cuts would go to million-dollar-plus incomes. The percentage of New York state tax returns reporting million-dollar incomes is four times that of Kentucky.

Advertisement

In America, stock ownership is highly concentrated among wealthy households. Thus, the benefits of the postelection stock market rally have gone disproportionately to them. As for real estate values, the biggest price gains have favored expensive properties on the coasts, The Wall Street Journal reports.

Republicans are pushing for deregulation of the financial industry. History shows that when Wall Street is let off the leash, speculation goes on a romp and the little people get rolled. In the interim, a lot of financiers get quite rich. And where do those financiers hang out? Not in coal country.

Tax cuts, bubbly home prices, fattening stock portfolios — thy name is stimulus to select local economies. That’s where folks buy their luxury cars, Italian tailoring and spa treatments. Taxing the above is how most states fill their coffers.

You can argue that robust spending in one part of America can trickle down to other places. But there would have to be an awful lot of trickle to make up for losses in health care subsidies worth thousands of dollars to less affluent Americans.

The House health care plan would shift $370 billion in Medicaid costs to the states, according to the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities. Rich states could steer some of their residents’ federal tax cuts toward making up for these losses. They could care for their own people.

Some progressives might find this discussion morally wanting. Point is, the rich blue states could use their rising wealth to further the progressive agenda without having to go through the right-wingers now running Washington.

Advertisement

Recall California Gov. Jerry Brown’s response to Trump administration threats against a space program that monitors climate change. “California will launch its own damn satellites,” Brown said. That’s the spirit.

Another point is that the federal income tax is unfair to the generally liberal — that is, richer — parts of the country because it ignores the local cost of living. Thus, $150,000 in Conway, Arkansas, gets taxed the same as $150,000 in San Francisco. That’s why many call the federal income tax “the blue state tax.”

Besides, if the poor parts of America resent the rich parts for sending them health care, what can you do about it? In blue America, you make the best of your situation; that’s what. And frankly, your situation is not bad, not bad at all.

Froma Harrop is a syndicated columnist. Follow her on Twitter @FromaHarrop. She can be reached by email at: fharrop@gmail.com.

Comments are not available on this story.

filed under: