You haven't done your homework sweetheart. I worked for an attorney who worked for the IRS. She personally told me that the rich have so many loopholes to hide income it's not even funny. So, who really pays more in income tax? The middle class, because they are not allowed the loopholes. Just ask Warren Buffet, who admitted his secretary pays more in taxes (percentage wise) than he does. Remember, I am talking percentage wise. So, do not confuse that with "who pays more taxes".
The tax code has been consistently reformed to lower tax rates for rich Americans.
Originally Posted by SeekingTruth
HoustonMilfDebbie ... er, "SeekingTruth" -- just a suggestion, if I may.
I know this isn't a popular practice around these parts, but it's generally a good idea to be sure that you have some clue about the subject under discussion before suggesting that another poster "hasn't done his homework." That way, you're likely to appear to be considerably less foolish.
Take a look at the graph and article by Professor Mulligan. It's clearly the case that the U.S. tax code is more progressive than that of Europe's social democracies, and it's also the case that it's more progressive than it was 40 or 50 years ago. The popularly held notion that multiple rounds of tax cutting relieved much of the tax burden from the wealthy and loaded it onto the middle class is flatly wrong. Go re-read what I posted earlier in this thread, and this time try to
understand it. Then you will learn that although tax
rates were cut dramatically, that doesn't mean that wealthy taxpayers got an
effective tax cut. In fact, although individual circumstances obviously vary, it would actually be more correct to say that the opposite was the case. The reason is that it was incomparably easier to shelter large swaths of -- indeed, in many cases, almost all of -- your income from taxation prior to the 1986 tax reform. So the high statutory tax rates of the "good ol' days" were completely farcical.
Increases in income and wealth disparity arose from other factors and were not caused by "tax cuts for the wealthy," or by any other tax policy changes of the last few decades.
Yeah, I know. Facts are stubborn things, and have a way of not yielding under pressure applied by, for example, those who enjoy dreams of utopian communism, and who idolize Marxist professors like Richard D. Wolff.
Now, don't you have some "homework" to finish?