I know its Federal. That's why I posted it. What is your point?
Table 1 shows that the top 1% paid 36.7% of all federal income taxes.
The article stated - and I repeated - that the top 1% paid 22% of ALL taxes once you account for state, local, SS and Medicare.
So, do you have ANY source that you can point to that indicates the the rich are NOT paying 22% of all taxes?
Yes or no? It's a simple question.
Or are you just spewing out a smoke screen to hide that fact that you were wrong in your original post in which you called me a liar?
As your income gets higher in the top bracket, the percentage represented by Medicare and SS get smaller but never goes all the way to zero. So it adds on to the 35% for the top federal income tax rate.
Yes, we are. 22%, in fact. Can you refute it?
Originally Posted by ExNYer
Your refrence pointed out Federal taxes, not sales tax, a very regressive tax. I should not have called you a liar, though it was a lie. For that I am sorry. There is no record keeping of who pays what in sales tax. It is just not kept by most taxpayers. There is no way they can compute it without those records.You will notice that your article did not point out that huge fact. Here is an interting article of marginial tax rates that is much more important point to discuss. .
http://www.informationliberation.com/?id=20551
Politicians talk this way because they generally talk about only one tax: the federal income tax, which offers graduated rates from 10% to 35%.
Politicians rarely talk about what real people experience: the true maze of taxes and government benefits. If someone put them all together, we could see what our actual tax burden was. We could see who pays at the highest or lowest rates. Discussions of tax policy wouldn't be a waste of time.
Well, two researchers did it.
In a study for the National Bureau of Economic Research, Boston University economists Laurence J. Kotlikoff and David Rapson have found that our all-in marginal tax rate is 40%, give or take a bit. Yes, you read that right: 40%.
Most workers will pay about that much on each dollar of income when all taxes -- federal and state income taxes, sales taxes, taxes for benefit programs, etc. -- are considered.
As a consequence, a 30-year-old couple earning only $20,000 a year has a marginal tax rate of 42.5%, while a 45-year-old couple earning $500,000 pays at 43.2%. There are some exceptions: A 30-year-old couple earning $50,000 a year, for instance, pays 24.4%, and a 60-year-old couple making $150,000 a year faces a tax rate of 47.7%.
The average marginal tax rate on incomes between $20,000 and $500,000 is 40.3%, the median tax rate is 41.8%, and the standard deviation of all of those rates is 5.3 percentage points. Basically, most of us pay about 40%, plus or minus 5.3 percentage points.
That's not a big range, particularly when you notice that it covers an income rise of 2,500%.