While admitting that everyday Americans have good reason to want change, an Ivy League legal scholar warned in the New York Times that too many people are embracingWhile admitting that everyday Americans have good reason to want change, an Ivy League legal scholar warned in the New York Times that too many people are embracing

Legal scholar warns of 'terrible idea' that could make US a 'failed state'

2026/06/03 00:24
4 min read
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While admitting that everyday Americans have good reason to want change, an Ivy League legal scholar warned in the New York Times that too many people are embracing a "terrible idea" for taxes that could make the U.S. a "failed state."

Natasha Sarin is a professor at Yale Law School and president of the university's Budget Lab. On Tuesday, she published a new piece for the Times, warning about the increasingly popular notion of ever more widespread tax exemptions, with officials across the political divide proposing them for the likes of "teachers, law enforcement officials and boat owners," and beyond. She even noted a proposal under which "the majority of Americans would not pay federal income taxes," with support from prominent Democratic senators, Chris Van Hollen and Cory Booker.

Sarin said that it is "no great mystery why people like the idea of lower taxes," especially now, as American consumers continue to grapple with a years-long string of incidents that have driven record-high inflation, from the COVID-19 pandemic to the invasion of Ukraine, all the way up to President Donald Trump's war in Iran. Despite those difficulties, she noted that the U.S. is "already a low-tax country," with lower rates than "almost all other highly developed economies."

Lowering taxes too much, she warned, would make it impossible "to run this large and complex country," which she also admitted is the goal for some hardline anti-government conservatives. Others, however, she warned to be careful what they wish for, and to instead push for more transparent, equitable and efficient uses of tax revenue.

"For those who prefer not to live in a failed state, the other option is to keep taxes steady, or even raise them for some who can easily afford the difference, and in exchange give Americans a government that works," Sarin wrote. "A government that builds highways and schools, defends us against adversaries, lifts children out of poverty and supports those who may be displaced by artificial intelligence."

Americans, she argued, have become so rigidly anti-tax largely because they are not seeing major benefits for their payments, unlike nations elsewhere in the world that use it for universal healthcare, or high-speed rail projects. She also suggested that people are rightly skeptical of the system because of how much it is skewed against lower earners, and how many breaks are given to the wealthy.

"Ordinary Americans are right to resent a tax system that’s skewed against them," Sarin continued. "There are a few limited efforts to correct the imbalance: California is debating a wealth tax, Washington State just signed into law a new tax rate for incomes over $1 million a year, and New York passed a new tax on luxury second homes in New York City. Just making those at the top pay their fair share won’t, however, be enough to get us where we need to be.

She added: "And the remedy for a system in which some aren’t fulfilling their civic duty isn’t to decide that none of us should. Nor is it to create exemptions that are impossible to administer. (In an era when seemingly every credit card swipe asks consumers to add 20 percent more, exactly which industries should qualify for the exemption on tipping? How do we verify how much of a person’s income was from tips?) President Trump was right in his first term to advocate a simpler tax code. More narrow exemptions move us further from that worthy goal."

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