Tuesday, September 30, 2008

Income Tax Disparity for the Rich?

Often cries for tax reform come from those who believe our progressive tax structure is so out of whack that the lower and middles classes should be ashamed of themselves.

Here’s a link:

http://www.atr.org/content/pdf/2008/August/081408ot-federalincometaxandwhattheypay.pdf

That link boasts the following:


According to IRS information from 2006

In terms of Share of Total Adjusted Gross Income

The top 1% earned 22% yet accounted for 40% of the total income tax burden.
The top 5% earned 37% yet paid in 60% of the total pie.
The top 10% earned 47% and paid 71%
The top 25% earned 68% and paid 86%
The bottom 50% earned 12.5% and paid only 3%

While some disparity exists it deserves closer examination. A comment was recently made that the top 25% foot 86% the bill for the rest of us. This has become a common ploy by Glenn Beck fans used to distort the reality of truth demonstrated by this imbalance.

Comparing the percentage of taxes paid to the percentage of the population represented is absolutely useless. Saying that a group collects almost 70% of income yet pays 86% of income tax collected is useful. Usually the balance of income earned by each echelon is left from the argument by the distorters of truth.

Something to consider, when someone throws numbers out like the top 25% pay 86% of the burden, they seek to WOW you with this implied extreme imbalance without a point of reference. One thing that reduces the WOW factor of these stats for me is to remember that among that bottom 50% we have to include the homeless, jobless, people on welfare and others who pay zero tax. Why when this comes up does the middle class always get lumped with the lowest of the lower class? I wonder what the statistics look like if we eliminate the bottom 10% from that bottom 50% figure. These numbers are not available on that link.

However, using the numbers we do have we can draw some very interesting conclusions that seem to reveal a certain attempt at sensationalizing the issue. if we take the top 25% (earns 68% pays 86%) less the top 1% (earns 22% and pays 40%) we are left with a rather wealthy 24% of our population earning 46% of income and paying in 46% of the tax burden. Why print details about the top 25% to make an argument for reform when clearly the problem lies at much higher echelons than 25%?

Furthermore, the top 5% less the top 1% appears to pay 20% of the collected tax burden while earning only 15% of the total adjusted gross income, much less a disparity than occurs for the top 1%. The top 10% less the top 5% earns 10% yet pays 11%. So the disparity is clear only at the extreme upper echelons of adjusted gross income. I'd like to see the numbers for the top .1% so as to eliminate them from the top 1% but those numbers do not appear on this table.

Another thing to consider: When we are talking about people who pay ZERO income tax, usually the immediate assumption is that only the lowest income earners are ~guilty~ of such a thing. Consider the wealthy and retired. Do they pay income tax from year to year? I suppose they would if they had investments that paid off but I doubt they rank among the upper echelons of adjusted gross income earners and if their investments were a losing venture I suppose they’d pay zero income tax. The above referenced table is a snapshot for one year so in 2006, it is very likely that some very wealthy individuals paid ZERO income tax. Consider also corporate income taxes. These might populate some of the highest echelon yet one could argue they pay zero tax as this cost is simply passed on to their customers in pricing procedures.

As you can see, I don’t buy into the passing of guilt or judgment or cries for reform based solely on who pays the most or least percentage of the income tax pie. It’s much more complicated than “The top 25% pay 86% of this burden” as one commenter put it.

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

I would be interested in seeing a flat percentage of a tax rate.

The different classes would pay the same percentage, but those who made more money would of course pay more taxes. No brackets to worry about.

Those similar percentages would vary, but the wealthy would still pay about 60% of all taxes. If you have five groups of people, and each group pays 25% income tax, and their earnings were separated like this:

Group 1 - $1,000,000
Group 2 - $500,000
Group 3 - $100,000
Group 4 - $50,000
Group 5 - $25,000

Then the revenue generated from taxing group 1 would be $250,000 per person; group 2 would be $125,000; $25,000; $12,500; $6,250.

The taxed total would be $418,750; accordingly, a Group 1 individual would account for 59.7% of the total tax of all five groups.

It sounds like more of a burden is being placed on the poor this way, but it sure seems fair across the board to me.

I hope I made sense...

Anonymous said...

Or what if we simply eliminated income tax and raised our consumer goods taxes? That would solve the problem of illegal immigrants not paying taxes.

Tobold Hornblower said...

If you buy a $6 Million dollar boat in Malibu, you pay $480,000 in sales tax.

When I buy my neighbor's dinghy for $50 bucks in Idaho, I pay $3 sales tax.

Of course the rich pay the taxes. They are the ones with the stuff.

If you want access to the best parts of the country club (USA), you pay extra club dues.

Iverson said...

Tobalot Hornalittle,

I think you're missing the punch here. We're talking INCOME TAX disparity, which exists. Just not to the extent the top 25% of income earners after write-offs and such would like you to believe(See reference to Adjusted Gross Income). Maybe you need to read the piece again before reading the following:

To add to my Blog, the percentage of the total income pie represented by those in the upper echelons of earnings is understated. Common sense dictates that the top 1% (even 25%) write off a lot more than do we schmucks on the other end of the scale. Soooo, another relevant figure to explore would be GROSS INCOME rather than ADJUSTED GROSS INCOME. This figure will not change their percentage of the Federal income tax contribution but it will narrow the disparity between percentage of the earnings pie and percentage of the contribution-to-the-establishment pie.

I'm tired of the insinuation that I'm a low-life middle-classer who does not toe the line based solely on the Federal Income tax chunk collected from the most gainfully employed .10% of our population. In fact, the top 1-25% (Surely the top 2-25% as demonstrated in my original piece) can share the guilt they aim at me WITH me!

Sales tax is a flat tax rate much like shdware shared as fair. (I got rhythm to go with that rhyme you just don't know it). Some even advocate a flat tax. That is, we pay X dollars per year regardless of income ... Seems pretty hard core really ...

I guess it could go hand in hand with my call to abolish the IRS all together and move to flat sales tax rates and toll collection aimed directly at users of funded endeavors whenever possible.

TH I feel like I'm talking to Sarah Palin and she has some other topic to ride rather than to answer the call at hand.