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www.taxfoundation.org...
Newly released data from the IRS clearly debunks the conventional Beltway rhetoric that the "rich" are not paying their fair share of taxes.
Indeed, the IRS data shows that in 2007—the most recent data available—the top 1 percent of taxpayers paid 40.4 percent of the total income taxes collected by the federal government. This is the highest percentage in modern history. By contrast, the top 1 percent paid 24.8 percent of the income tax burden in 1987, the year following the 1986 tax reform act.
Remarkably, the share of the tax burden borne by the top 1 percent now exceeds the share paid by the bottom 95 percent of taxpayers combined. In 2007, the bottom 95 percent paid 39.4 percent of the income tax burden. This is down from the 58 percent of the total income tax burden they paid twenty years ago.
To put this in perspective, the top 1 percent is comprised of just 1.4 million taxpayers and they pay a larger share of the income tax burden now than the bottom 134 million taxpayers combined.
Some in Washington say the tax system is still not progressive enough. However, the recent IRS data bolsters the findings of an OECD study released last year showing that the U.S.—not France or Sweden—has the most progressive income tax system among OECD nations. We rely more heavily on the top 10 percent of taxpayers than does any nation and our poor people have the lowest tax burden of those in any nation.
We are definitely overdue for some honesty in the debate over the progressivity of the nation's tax burden before lawmakers enact any new taxes to pay for expanded health care.
Suppose that every day, ten men go out for beer and the bill for all ten comes to $100. If they paid their bill the way we pay our taxes, it would go something like this:
The first four men (the poorest) would pay nothing.
Originally posted by theWCH
This parable, although raising valid points, breaks down for this reason:
Suppose that every day, ten men go out for beer and the bill for all ten comes to $100. If they paid their bill the way we pay our taxes, it would go something like this:
The first four men (the poorest) would pay nothing.
If any six men agree to cover the tab for any other four men, then they're obviously gaining utility from the transaction. Maybe the four poorest have somehow managed to be the most entertaining. Or maybe the six richest just enjoy complaining about having to pay for the four poorest. Or maybe the rich guys are just generous, and gain happy feelings from being so. In any event, utility is gained -- or else this scenario wouldn't be taking place.
Dr. David R. Kamerschen seems like he's more interested in pushing ideology than economic theory.
Oh, For The Love Of....!
This is the most shocking example of mathematical illiteracy I've seen in a very loooong time!
And I've dealt with A LOT of math Illiterates! (Most of them CPA's!)
Very well, School's in session. Pay attention.
10 people. Bar tab for beer= $100
If each paid an equal amount (Fair Share) towards the Tab, each would owe = $10
10 people X $10 = $100
However, per the provided example, 4 of those folks were required to pay nothing, therefore: 10-4= 6.
6 people were left to pay a $100 beer tab.
If each of the remaining 6 drinkers were to pay the same amount toward the bill, each would have owed aproximately $16.67
$100/6 = $16.666666666... (rounded off to : $16.67)
Now, instead of dividing up the bill equally amoung the remaining 6 drinkers, they decided to pay based on their percived ability to afford the expense. The named "Professor of Economics" thusly likens this method to the current income tax system.
Therefore the break down of the original $100 dollar tab looked like this:
Drinkers 1-4 pay - $0 or 0% of the tab
Drinker #5 pays - $1 or 1% of the tab
Drinker #6 pays - $3 or 3% of the tab
Drinker #7 pays - $7 or 7% of the tab
Drinker #8 pays - $12 or 12% of the tab
Drinker #9 pays - $18 or 18% of the tab
Drinker #10 pays - $59 or 59% of the tab
Total $100 or 100% of the tab
Got that?
Pay attention to the Percentages
paid by each of the drinkers. This is where the good Dr. Kemerschen "falls off the wagon"!
In the example, the barkeep, in a show of generosity, gives the drinkers a $20 "rebate". This effectively reduces the beer tab to $80 for the 10 drinkers.
$100 - $20 = $80
Of course, since 4 of those drinkers didn't pay anything in the first place, the remaining 6, paying customers are left to divey up the windfall.
If the drinkers would have stuck to their original plan, as they devised for apportioning the bill, the split would have been easy;
Each payor would have received a portion of the refund equivalent to the portion (percentage) of the bill he paid. Thus:
Drinkers 1-4 paid $0 get $0 back final amount paid = $00.00
Drinker #5 paid $1 gets $0.20 back, final amount paid = $00.80
Drinker #6 paid $3 gets $0.60 back, final amount paid = $ 2.40
Drinker #7 paid $7 gets $1.40 back, final amount paid = $ 5.60
Drinker #8 paid $12 gets $2.40 back, final amount paid = $ 9.60
Drinker #9 paid $18 gets $3.60 back, final amount paid = $14.40
Drinker #10 paid $59 gets $11.80 back, final amount paid = $47.20
Original Tab $100 minus $20/20% rebate = final tab $80.00
The good doctor tried to mislead us into believeing in the inequity of the tax system by erroneously attempting to equally divide the $20 refund offered amoung 6 recipients, when, in fact, those recipients, by virtue of the fact that they had not equally contributed to the expense (the original bar tab, or by analogy, the income tax) were not equally entitled the the same refund.
The tax system does not work that way.
Our tax system is geared such that the more you make, the more you (should) pay. And the more you have paid, the more you should get back, when it is due.
Ah well, I guess it is true;
PHD = Piled Higher, Deeper!
Originally posted by theWCH
It does take place. But it takes place because people -- presumably not you, and certainly not me -- are gaining utility from it.
Watch the flow of money, not the ideology or the party.
[edit on 2-8-2009 by theWCH]
The good doctor tried to mislead us into believeing in the inequity of the tax system by erroneously attempting to equally divide the $20 refund offered amoung 6 recipients, when, in fact, those recipients, by virtue of the fact that they had not equally contributed to the expense (the original bar tab, or by analogy, the income tax) were not equally entitled the the same refund.
The tax system does not work that way.
Our tax system is geared such that the more you make, the more you (should) pay. And the more you have paid, the more you should get back, when it is due.
Indeed, the IRS data shows that in 2007—the most recent data available—the top 1 percent of taxpayers paid 40.4 percent of the total income taxes collected by the federal government. This is the highest percentage in modern history. By contrast, the top 1 percent paid 24.8 percent of the income tax burden in 1987, the year following the 1986 tax reform act.
Originally posted by mhc_70
reply to post by silent thunder
I really don't understand this mentality. What happened to the American dream? Do you believe its not out there for anybody willing to work hard enough to get it?
When people stop pointing their fingers at others and point the finger at themself is when things begin to change for them.
Just because you feel they may have an advantage does not minimalize your oppurtunity, unless you allow it to.
[edit on 2-8-2009 by mhc_70]
Originally posted by silent thunder
This metaphor, while powerful and instructive, is not exactly perfect because it doesn't take into account the INTERACTIONS between the various men. That is, the rich and the poor aren't merely all "sitting at a bar drinking beer" on a daily basis as equal customers all receiving the same mugs of beer. Rather, the rich use the poor for labor and /or consumption of their products, they extend credit to them at high rates, they forbid them from trampling on their palatial estates, they privatize services from education to sewar lines, leaving the poor with the crumbling public infrastructure, they posess innate advantages in the forms of school and family connections, and so on.
[edit on 8/2/09 by silent thunder]