Mamdani Rebuts Bezos on Billionaire Taxes as NYC Eyes $500 Million Luxury-Home Levy
Updated
Updated · CNBC · May 20
Mamdani Rebuts Bezos on Billionaire Taxes as NYC Eyes $500 Million Luxury-Home Levy
3 articles · Updated · CNBC · May 20
Zohran Mamdani answered Jeff Bezos on X after Bezos said doubling his taxes would not help “that teacher in Queens,” writing that he knew teachers there “who would beg to differ.”
Bezos made the remark on CNBC while arguing for cutting taxes on lower earners instead, saying the top 1% pay about 40% of tax revenue and the bottom half just 3%, which he said should fall to zero.
New York City teachers start at $68,902 with a bachelor’s degree and $77,455 with a master’s, with those salaries set to rise in September 2026 to $71,314 and $80,166.
The exchange sharpens Mamdani’s tax-the-rich push to fund city services and tackle affordability, including a proposed tax on second homes worth $5 million or more.
Mamdani says the pied-a-terre tax could raise $500 million a year, though the city comptroller estimates $340 million to $380 million; Bezos said that narrower levy is “a fine thing” for New York.
With billionaires often paying lower tax rates than nurses, can city-level taxes truly fix a national problem of wealth inequality?
As NYC’s luxury market booms despite tax hike proposals, is the long-feared 'millionaire migration' threat actually a myth?
If higher taxes don't scare away the rich, what factors actually determine where they choose to live and invest their wealth?
NYC Faces $12 Billion Deficit: Mayor Mamdani’s Tax Proposals, Luxury Real Estate Backlash, and the Push for Systemic Reform
Overview
New York City faces a major budget crisis, with Mayor Zohran Mamdani unveiling a $124.7 billion executive budget aimed at closing a $12 billion deficit over two years. Instead of raising property taxes or cutting essential services, the mayor focuses on internal savings, such as identifying $1.2 billion in efficiencies and creating a more predictable debt payment schedule. These strategies are designed to avoid using rainy day reserves and rely partly on state aid and pension payment deferrals. The approach highlights a shift toward targeted measures and fiscal discipline while navigating political and economic challenges.