Bowfinger
Lifer
It would be very helpful if you read and respond to the things I actually say instead of your twisted assumptions about what I must really mean. I agree with the above. Where we disagree is whether we are to the left or the right of the optimal revenue point.Originally posted by: charrison
Bowfinger,
Let me clear a few things up. First of all there is exists an optimal tax rate, meaning a rate that collects the most revenue for government. Going above this rate keeps money from being tax as it finds shelters to go into, that is what tax acountants are for. Going below this rate less revenue is generated simply because it is just not high enough. This is the basic laffer curve and that is how real life works. I am sorry you disagree with this, but most economist genenraly agree on this basic principle. The debate is more about where the optimal point is at.
At one point our top marginal rate was 90%, JFK dropped that 70%. Even with a lower rate, the wealthy in country found themselves paying a larger share of the government costs.
This happened again with reagan when he droppd the 70% rate to 38%. The same thing happened, the rich found themselves paying a larger share of governments costs. ANd the same thing has happened with the latest tax cuts, they rich have found themselves paying a larger share of governments cost. This is nto even up for debate as it is backed up by many years of IRS data. The same thing happened in the 90s when capital gains was cut, Same thing happened with the latest capital gains cut. The same thing has happened in other countries that dropped their top marginal rates, so we are not in a unique situation. So without a doubt the data backs up the laffer curve.
And this is where you make the giant leap of illogic, a fatal non sequitur of sorts. Repeat after me:So we are back to, do you want to collect less revenue at a higher tax rate. or more revenue at a lower tax rate. You seem to keep opting for the higher rates, even though the data continues to show them being less effective at collecting revenue.
- Correlation does not prove causation.
Correlation does not prove causation.
Correlation does NOT prove causation.
Correlation does NOT prove causation.
Correlation does NOT prove causation.
Correlation does NOT prove causation.
Your specific point about why the wealthy often continue to pay an increasing portion of total tax revenues has also been addressed multiple times. The total income and wealth of the financial elite is increasing dramatically faster than the income of the middle and lower classes. In short, the rich are getting richer -- much, much, richer. So, even while their marginal rate drops, they still end up paying more because they're making so much more. It is NOT because their rate dropped, it is in spite of it. The math is really pretty simple: 15% of 500 is more than 30% of 100. (And before the inevitable diversion, those are example numbers, not actual data.)
On the contrary, you have discussed it, and you continue to advocate it every time you justify the extremely preferential treatment of capital gains. Given that capital gains primarily benefit the wealthy, giving them preferential tax treatment is regressive. That is "how real life works" as you put it. Sure, the less-than-wealthy also have capitial gains, but they are comparitively a drop in the bucket.And as far as regressive taxation goes, that has not even been discussed.
LOL. What a crock. All "the government" is doing is paying for the services and infrastructure demanded by the public, including special interests who want their piece of the public purse. When spending is reduced, tax rates can follow.But as far a greed goes, the only thing greedy is a government wanting a 30% cut for one mans labor or investment.
I contend that much of this government spending is essential to building and maintaining the extraordinary physical, financial, and educational infrastructure necessary to providing plentiful opportunities to rise to the 30% tax bracket. It makes no sense to cut taxes in half if the result is a 90% drop in average income.
Personally, I'm a glass-is-half-full kind of guy. I enjoy what I get to keep rather than whining about what I don't. I'd rather have 50% of $1 million than 95% of $1 thousand. For those who disagree, I hear Guatemala is nice this time of year.