


Republicans are searching for ways to “pay for” their tax cuts. Democrats want the rich to pay more tax. Here’s a solution that should make everyone happy.
House Ways and Means Committee Chairman Jason Smith is suggesting a tax on the $840 billion college endowments. These endowments will soon eclipse $1 trillion in size.
It’s high time that bloated and entitled universities pay their fair share for the government services they use.
Why not? Their professors forever lecture us about tax “fairness,” but the schools where they teach a few hours a week for their munificent salaries are the very embodiment of mostly white “privilege.” They are the richest institutions in the world that go untaxed.
The cost of this leakage to the tax base is going to grow exponentially as this generation of billionaires (Jeff Bezos, Bill Gates, Mark Zuckerberg and others) passes on trillions of dollars; much of it will enter into the vaults of the universities. These are capital gains that have NEVER been taxed — and never will be.
Why is this a problem?
A good and just tax system has a broad base, so everyone pays — but a low rate so the tax system doesn’t discourage work, saving and investment. This means no loopholes and carveouts that allow the rich to keep their fortunes out of reach of the tax man.
What makes the college endowment scam even worse is that the preponderance of the dollars don’t go to small colleges or community colleges but rather to the Harvards, Yales, Stanfords and Princetons.
It makes no sense that millionaires and billionaires can make seven-, eight- and even nine-figure donations to their alma maters and these funds escape the taxes that all the rest of us pay. Colleges pay almost no income taxes and generally avoid paying property taxes even though their vast tracts of valuable land are often in or near struggling inner cities.
I have no problem with a deduction for legitimate charities like soup kitchens, homeless shelters and orphanages. But Northwestern and Stanford need tax breaks? There are at least a dozen schools bulging with $10 billion endowments, and scores more with more than $1 billion each. What public purpose is advanced by these storehouses of wealth?
Harvard’s $50 billion-plus endowment is so large that the school could charge free tuition to every student from now until kingdom come. Yet Harvard still charges nearly $100,000 a year for tuition and room and board.
This is the real sin of this unworthy tax loophole. Even with these giant endowments, tuitions have been rising at two to three times the rate of inflation. The argument that tax-free donations make colleges more affordable has proven to be patently false. The bigger the endowment, the more the schools charge students and their parents — and taxpayers.
Overly endowed universities today are more like investment houses that happen to have classrooms. Colleges need to pay their fair share, and the revenues should be used to help pay for the Trump tax cuts — which benefit everyone.
Stephen Moore is a visiting fellow at the Heritage Foundation. He is also an economic advisor to the Trump campaign