Only the Rich
Pay Taxes - A Response
remember
The figures of the distribution of income taxes
were recently released
by the IRS and are referenced by an article at
www.rushlimbaugh.com
titled "Only The Rich Pay Taxes - Top 50% of
Wage Earners Pay 96.09%
of Income Taxes". The complete article can be
found here.
Following are some excerpts from the Rush article
and my response:
The top 1%, who earn 20.81% of all income
covered under the income
tax, are paying 37.42% of the federal
tax bite.
Here are the wage earners in each category
and the percentages they
pay:
Top 5% - 56.47% of all income taxes;
Top 10% - 67.33% of all income
taxes; Top 25% - 84.01% of all income
taxes. Top 50% - 96.09% of all
income taxes. The bottom 50%? They pay
a paltry 3.91% of all income
taxes. The top 1% is paying more than
ten times the federal income
taxes than the bottom 1%! And who earns
what? The top 1% earns
20.81% of all income. The top 5% earns
35.30% of the pie. The top
10% earns 46.01%; the top 25% earns
67.15%, and the top 50% earns
87.01% of all the income.
The above excerpt is from the article as it appeared
on October 23rd.
On about November 6th, the last percentage in
the sentence "The top 1%
is paying more than ten times the federal income
taxes than the bottom
1%!" was changed from 1% to 50%. Apparently,
someone figured out that
the statement was nonsensical or, at least, an
understatement. You
see, due to the earned income credit, the bottom
1% paid negative
income taxes. Hence, I could correctly say that
I personally paid
over a billion times the income taxes than the
bottom 1%! In any
case, this percentage was changed to 50% in the
article on the site.
The problem is that the statement then became
untrue. As can be seen
from the excerpt above, the top 1% paid 37.42%
of all income taxes
and the bottom 50% paid 3.91% (100 - 96.09).
37.42% is about 9.57,
not "more than ten", times 3.91%. The initial
mistake was arguably
understandable. However, then changing it to
an error seems a bit
disturbing. At present, the initial 1% version
can still be seen here.
I have posted several graphs and tables that compare
the distribution
of income and taxes here.
The first graph and table show the distribution
of income and federal
taxes for quintiles of wage earners (the top
quintile is split into
two deciles). As can be seen, the distribution
of income taxes paid
is heavily skewed toward the upper quintiles.
However, income can
be seen to be similarly (though somewhat less)
skewed.
The second table shows the relative skewing of
federal taxes paid
compared to income. It shows how much more or
less each group pays
than it would if its share of taxes were identical
to its share of
income. Estate and gift taxes are the most heavily
skewed toward
high-wage earners with the top 1% paying 334%
more than would be
determined by its income. Individual and corporate
taxes are the
next most heavily skewed with the top 1% paying
about double what
would be determined by its income. The top 10%
pays about 50% more.
The payroll tax is actually skewed toward the
middle-wage earners
because Social Security taxes do not apply above
a certain earnings
level and no payroll taxes apply to "unearned"
income such as capital
gains. For total federal taxes, the top 1% pays
about 36% more than
would be determined by its income. The top 10%
pays about 24% more.
The second graph and last table show the percent
of income in federal
taxes paid by each group. As can be seen, the
first four quintiles
pay more in payroll taxes than in income taxes.
Getting back to the article, the author states
that the IRS numbers
"nukes the liberal lie that the rich don't pay
taxes". I have never
heard anyone seriously argue that the top 1%
(or 10% or 20%) of wage
earners pay no taxes. In any case, the article
seems to go beyond
this conclusion. It states that the IRS numbers
"illustrate a truth
that will startle you: that half of Americans
with the highest
incomes pays 96.09% of all income tax". In fact,
there is nothing
truly startling about this since this group earns
87.01% of the
income. They are paying just about 10.4% more
than they would under
a flat tax based strictly on income. Considering
that we have a
progressive tax system and that everyone gets
at least a standard
deduction, this is hardly surprising.
The Rush article later states: 'Remember this
the next time you hear
the "tax cuts for the rich" business. Understand
that the so-called
rich are about the only ones paying taxes anymore.'
The fact is,
there is a valid argument that the Bush tax cuts
were somewhat tilted
toward the rich. I've posted a graph and tables
showing the percent
cut in the effective tax rate provided by the
fully-implemented Bush
tax cut
here
.
The very largest tax cut of 33% goes to the lowest-wage
workers in the newlycreated 10% tax bracket. However, the smallest tax
cut of 7.4% goes to single-filers with a taxable income of $27,050. For
couples filing
jointly, the smallest tax cut is 8.8% for taxable
incomes of $45,200.
The tax cut then rises gradually to 15.5% for
single-filers at
$136,750 and 14.0% for joint-filers at $166,500.
It's just as valid
for Republicans to target their tax cuts as it
is for Democrats.
However, such targeting should be accompanied
by an open, persuasive
argument. The Bush tax cut was not. It was sold
as an equitable,
across-the-board tax cut.
Toward the end of the article, the author states:
Misty tried the old line that all wealth
is inherited. Not true.
John Weicher, as a senior fellow at
the Hudson Institute and a
visiting scholar at the Federal Reserve
Bank, wrote in his February
13, 1997 Washington Post Op-Ed, "Most
of the rich have earned their
wealth... Looking at the Fortune 400,
quite a few even of the very
richest people came from a standing
start, while others inherited
a small business and turned it into
a giant corporation." What's
happening here is not that "the rich
are getting richer and the
poor are getting poorer." The numbers
prove it.
Which numbers prove it? The paragraph above only
states that "quite
a few even of the very richest people came from
a standing start,
while others inherited a small business and turned
it into a giant
corporation." If the author has numbers, he should
state the numbers
and/or provide a source.
On the topic of inheritance, the first graph and
table mentioned above
do provide evidence of a related item. There
does seem to be a very
strong correlation between high-income wage earners
and people who pay
estate and gift taxes. Over 99 percent of estate
and gift taxes were
paid by the top quintile of wage earners. Hence,
while these numbers
do not indicate how much of any group's wealth
is inherited, they do
indicate that the great majority of wealth that
is inherited goes to
those who already have high incomes.
The author concludes:
This story, along with a link to the IRS
chart, will stay somewhere
on the RushLimbaugh.com homepage so everyone
can see and find these
numbers at any time. It's crucial that
people get this, so please,
share it with a friend now!
I would likewise like to post this response on
that site but I don't
see anywhere that such responses are allowed.
Hence, I'll just post
this on forums that reprint the story. Likewise,
feel free to post
this response and/or share it with a friend! |