Billionaire Warren Buffet visits the White House with his wife,...

Billionaire Warren Buffet visits the White House with his wife, Astrid. Buffet has said taxes on the rich are too low. (March 14, 2012) Credit: Getty Images

Sometimes "who says it" is just as important as "what they say."

So it is with Warren Buffett's op-ed about taxes and fiscal reality in the New York Times this week. This is the "Oracle of Omaha," acknowledged the best investor of the past 50 years, the wise man of finance, a man outside the political and ideological battles of Washington.

What Buffett says is straightforward and obvious:

1. Raising the marginal tax rate to Clinton-era levels will not have any impact on investment decisions. Indeed economic growth was robust during periods of much higher marginal rates - benefiting both the wealthy and the middle class. Recall that this was the same conclusion that the Congressional Research Service reached in a report Republicans recently tried to suppress.

2. Cuts in tax rates have given, as Buffett puts it, "a huge tail wind" to the super rich. These folks paid an average tax of 26.4 percent in 1992, but only 19.9 percent in 2009, on average income of $202 million. As Buffet says, this is an "outrage." 3. There should be, according to Buffett, an absolute minimum tax of 30 percent on income between $1 million and $10 million, and 35 percent above that. No loopholes, no hidden games, keep it simple.

4. The most important point. Over the long haul, government should set its goals at spending 21 percent of GDP, and raising 18.5 percent in revenue, leaving a gap - an annual deficit - of about 2.5 percent of GDP. That is manageable with a growing economy. And these figures are close to our historical norms. The crisis of the past few years has been that revenue fell to 15.5 percent of GDP while spending crept up to 22.4 percent.

An annual deficit of 7 percent of GDP is not manageable. But notice, the most significant deviation has been the revenue decline, not the spending increase! We should spend about 21 percent of GDP, but are spending 22.4 percent. We should collect 18.5 percent in revenue, but are collecting only 15.5 percent.

So listen to the wisest investor in America: Raise marginal rates, run a consistent but manageable deficit, and stop worrying about those at the top of the income spectrum.

It sounds very simple and reasonable, especially coming from Warren Buffett.

Spitzer, former governor of New York, hosts "Viewpoint" on Current TV.

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