OMB: Top 20% pay 95% of taxes, middle class 'single digits'

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OMB: Top 20% pay 95% of taxes, middle class 'single digits'

http://www.washingtonexaminer.com/o...es-middle-class-single-digits/article/2638746

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It came in a discussion before students of the school's Institute of Politics and Public Service at the McCourt School of Public Policy. The discussion was directed by Cathy Koch, a tax expert and former Senate aide.

When the two turned to the taxes the rich pay, Mulvaney declared, "The top 20 percent of folks who file a tax return, the top 20 percent, pay 95 percent of the taxes."

OMB later cited internal data to the Washington Examiner that said the top 20 percent of people to pay income taxes account for 94.8 percent of those taxes in 2016.

That appears to be a jump from just a few years ago. In 2015, the Wall Street Journal reported that the top 20 percent of income earners paid 84 percent of income taxes.

Mulvaney explained:

If you break the income tax universe into what we call quintiles, so equal sized 20 percent columns, the first two columns, the first quintile and the lower quintile, don't pay any taxes at all. In fact they net positive. We pay them when they file a tax return.

That middle quintile, which you might describe, some people do, as middle class, pays an effective rate in the low single digits. And all of the taxes are paid by folks in the top two quintiles, and that last quintile pays almost fully, 95 percent I think, of the taxes.

People always ask all the time, ‘Why do you want to give a tax cut to the rich?' Here's the math. We have a progressive tax system, which means that if you make $1 million and I make $50,000, we both pay the exact same rate on the first, let's say, $20,000. And then, from the next $20,000 up to my $50,000, and her next $20,000 to her next $50,000, we pay the same, I think it's 12 percent of 15 percent, I can't remember where the brackets are right now. And then she goes on to pay her higher rate on the stuff that she makes and I stop.

Well, if you want to give me, the middle class, a cut, take my 15 percent rate down to say 10 percent, and that gives the middle class a cut. Guess who else benefits from that, she does. She pays that same rate on the way up the brackets.

His conclusion, "You could sit there and do nothing but lower the rates on the middle class, and all other things being equal, you're giving the rich a tax cut.
 
I read another figure that if your gross income is ~$77k, congrats you are part of the evil top 20% that gets all the benefits of tax cuts!


Another thought I had was why do we need tax deductions anyways if the basis is a progressive income tax system anyway, then couldn't you graduate the percentages and income brackets in a sufficient manner to make the same outcome without any need for deductions?
 
BS. FICA is part of the income tax. You pay over 15% of your earnings up to around $115,000 to it.
 
BS. FICA is part of the income tax. You pay over 15% of your earnings up to around $115,000 to it.

That doesn't change the general thrust of what Mulvaney said at all. Upper income earners pay all the taxes. Probably more like the top 20% pays 75-85% of taxes.

And it is good that Mulvaney pointed out that any tax cut is going to disproportionately affect upper income earners.
 
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BS. FICA is part of the income tax. You pay over 15% of your earnings up to around $115,000 to it.

Also, the medicare tax. State taxes, local taxes, property taxes, sales taxes, , taxes on earned interest an dividends, taxes on your phone bill, the inflation tax, the cops writing a ticket tax. If you add them all up its higher then taxes in most of Europe.

To the OPs post, if they cut taxes without cutting spending we just get screwed the other way.
 
Also, the medicare tax. State taxes, local taxes, property taxes, sales taxes, , taxes on earned interest an dividends, taxes on your phone bill, the inflation tax, the cops writing a ticket tax. If you add them all up its higher then taxes in most of Europe.

To the OPs post, if they cut taxes without cutting spending we just get screwed the other way.


Pretty much all of that is untrue. If you add up all taxes at the federal state and local level, the rate comes to 26%. The only European country with lower overall taxes is Ireland. http://time.com/money/4862673/us-tax-burden-vs-oecd-countries/ http://www.taxpolicycenter.org/briefing-book/how-do-us-taxes-compare-internationally

It still makes sense to cut taxes even without spending cuts because lower taxes encourage more production. That is the supply side argument.
 
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My household makes 110 k, in a suburb of nyc. We're poor as f. Childcare and rent are 3000 a month after taxes of course. That tax cut can't come fast enough.
 
Pretty much all of that is untrue. If you add up all taxes at the federal state and local level, the rate comes to 26%. The only European country with lower overall taxes is Ireland. http://time.com/money/4862673/us-tax-burden-vs-oecd-countries/ http://www.taxpolicycenter.org/briefing-book/how-do-us-taxes-compare-internationally

It still makes sense to cut taxes even without spending cuts because lower taxes encourage more production. That is the supply side argument.

Just as I thought, that Fed study based that figure on total tax burden compared to national GDP, not on an individual level.

https://www.chicagofed.org/publications/chicago-fed-letter/2017/382#ftn7

An individual, or a family of four, pay over 50% of their income every year in combined taxation.
 
My household makes 110 k, in a suburb of nyc. We're poor as f. Childcare and rent are 3000 a month after taxes of course. That tax cut can't come fast enough.

Do you benefit from the state and property tax deduction?
 
I read another figure that if your gross income is ~$77k, congrats you are part of the evil top 20% that gets all the benefits of tax cuts!

If you're making $77k you're super rich and deserve to be taxed like crazy.

You don't get that kind of salary until after you've been with the TSA for 15-20 years
 
BS. FICA is part of the income tax. You pay over 15% of your earnings up to around $115,000 to it.

FICA and the Medicare tax aren't income taxes, but are employment taxes governed by a different subtitle. Unlike income taxes they don't include any deductions and aren't refundable.
 
FICA and the Medicare tax aren't income taxes, but are employment taxes governed by a different subtitle. Unlike income taxes they don't include any deductions and aren't refundable.


Oh look; it's another RPF contrarian; one not interested in discussion, but just to be contrary.


in·come
ˈinˌkəm/
noun
noun: income; plural noun: incomes
money received, especially on a regular basis, for work or through investments.


tax
taks/
noun
noun: tax; plural noun: taxes
1. a compulsory contribution to state revenue, levied by the government on workers' income and business profits or added to the cost of some goods, services, and transactions.



Ergo--income tax.

But please, enlighten me with your tax lawyer technicalities.
 
So, I feel like I have to reiterate this since I've often pointed out the same thing on the other side.

The top 20% are really just people in the highest earning time of their lives. Meaning, that the individuals who are in the top 20% this year will not be the same individuals 5 years from now. In fact, there is a large percentage of these people who are only in the top 20% for one year - when they receive an inheritance or a settlement payment of some sort. Then, when you factor in geographical differences, the numbers get even more mushy. We're really talking about the same people as those in the lower brackets.

Those class warriors on both sides always seem to forget that we are not talking about the perennially wealthy when we use stats in this way.
 
Top 20% pay 95% of taxes, middle class 'single digits'

That's the kind of statistic that wealthy high income talk show hosts like Hannity like to quote.

Never really saw the purpose in bringing up a redundant statistic that tells us that people who make more money pay more income taxes. Apparently someone like Hannity brings it up to make it sound unfair that he pays so much. On the other hand, the exact same statistic is evidence of the growing income and wealth gap that can be used as evidence of "unfair" distribution of wealth.

Both sides seem to ignore the fact that the wealthy can afford tax lawyers to make their effective rates lower, and the cuts in business rates will disproportionately benefit those at the top who can use that as a tax shelter. And no one wants to address a root cause of government cronyism that often benefits the connected few at the top.

The progressive income tax is often talked about, but as others have said, there are plenty of regressive taxes which effect the lowest income levels (think cigarette, alcohol, gas, sales taxes, etc.).
 
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And Sarah Huckabee just gave a long winded analogy related to the OP and how the top pay the most. Video should be available soon.
 
Pretty much all of that is untrue. If you add up all taxes at the federal state and local level, the rate comes to 26%. The only European country with lower overall taxes is Ireland. http://time.com/money/4862673/us-tax-burden-vs-oecd-countries/ http://www.taxpolicycenter.org/briefing-book/how-do-us-taxes-compare-internationally

It still makes sense to cut taxes even without spending cuts because lower taxes encourage more production. That is the supply side argument.

Really? From your link:

image


Besides income and state and local taxes most European countries also have a Value Added Tax which in most countries is the maximum of 25%.

A research paper published this week by the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago includes the above chart, highlighting the tax burdens of all 35 OECD countries as of 2014. With a tax burden of 25% — a measurement that includes income, property, and various other taxes — the U.S. is near the very bottom, well below the overall average of 34%. It ranks below all the measured countries except Korea, Chile, and Mexico.

Trump and other Republicans are right about one aspect of U.S. taxes, however. When it comes to taxing corporate profits, the U.S. does indeed have one of the highest nominal maximum rates in the world, at 35%.

The new study’s authors looked in particular at how the U.S. tax regime stacks up against Germany’s — a nation they chose because its economy resembles that of the U.S., and because Trump has said Germany’s trade surplus with the U.S gives it an upper hand economically.

And U.S. corporations are in fact paying higher income taxes than German ones. As it happens, deductions and other tax strategies mean relatively few U.S. corporations actually get stuck paying the maximum nominal 35% rate, instead paying about 20% on average. But that is still higher than the comparable 15% effective rate that German corporations pay, according to the Chicago Fed estimates.
 
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It still makes sense to cut taxes even without spending cuts because lower taxes encourage more production. That is the supply side argument.

Ah, Keynesianism. Krugman would be proud. Cutting taxes without cutting spending will give a temporary boost to the economy, a bubble if you will, that will collapse as the inflation required to maintain national spending devalues the "extra" money now in private hands. A tax cut without spending cuts is no tax cut at all. It just obfuscates the tax by monetizing it.
 
That's the kind of statistic that wealthy high income talk show hosts like Hannity like to quote.

Never really saw the purpose in bringing up a redundant statistic that tells us that people who make more money pay more income taxes. Apparently someone like Hannity brings it up to make it sound unfair that he pays so much. On the other hand, the exact same statistic is evidence of the growing income and wealth gap that can be used as evidence of "unfair" distribution of wealth.

Both sides seem to ignore the fact that the wealthy can afford tax lawyers to make their effective rates lower, and the cuts in business rates will disproportionately benefit those at the top who can use that as a tax shelter. And no one wants to address a root cause of government cronyism that often benefits the connected few at the top.

The progressive income tax is often talked about, but as others have said, there are plenty of regressive taxes which effect the lowest income levels (think cigarette, alcohol, gas, sales taxes, etc.).

The net amount people pay is irrelevant but the percentage sure is. I think the progressive tax system is THE biggest injustice in the US. Everyone should pay the same rate. And the idea that gas and cigarette tax is "regressive" is BS. Laws should be the same for everyone. If there's a gas tax, everyone should pay the same %. If there's an income tax, same percent. That's like saying we should have certain murder laws for people who make under 50k and certain laws for people who make over 50k.
 
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