Originally posted by: Rainsford
-snip-
That's almost what you said, but not quite. "More progressive" (which was the claim) implies that the rich pay a greater percentage of their income in taxes than they used to. The fact that their share of the tax burden went up doesn't mean anything if their share of the total income went up even more. Their effective tax rate could have actually DROPPED in that situation, which wouldn't quite support your point very well.
(Sorry, I don't mean to pick on you, just too many others talking about disposable income and such irrelevancies).
See the bolded section above.
No, progressive means they pay a greater share of the (combined/total) tax burden. That is different from them paying a greater (or lessor) rate than before.
If we raised the top bracket from 35% to 36%, and all the lower brackets went up to 34% that would be LESS progressive. Just because the rich's tax bracket went up doesn't mean it became
more progressive.
Likewise, just because the "rich" bracket went down doesn't mean LESS progressive.
How "progressive" taxes are (or have become) requires that we look at the total picture, and then compare the portion of (total taxes) recieved from rich vs. others. It is a comparative measure, not absolute.
Someone above mentioned loopholes etc enjoyed by the rich. Well, there aren't any, not legal anyway. They were done away with in 1986 IIRC (under Reagan).
Moreover, the personal exemptions and itemized deductions are phased out for the rich. Also, their AMT exemption is also phased out. What these things (phase-outs) do is effectively raise your tax rate. They are just "back door" rate increases and done purposefully so as not to attract the kind of attention that outright tac rate increases do. So, the rates for the rich are understated if one looks merely to the tax rate charts.
But here's the grip, and some may consider it legitimate. Look at the tax rate chart below (BTW: That damn thing was a PITA to format):
If Taxpayer's Income Is... Then Estimated Taxes Are...
Between But Not Over Base Tax + Rate Of the Amount Over
$0-----------------$15,650-----------$0-----------10%---------- $0
$15,650-----------$63,700-----------$1,565.00---15%--------$15,650
$63,700----------$128,500-----------$8,772.50---25%-------$63,700
$128,500--------$195,850------------$24,972.50--28%------$128,500
$195,850--------$349,700-----------$43,830.50---33%------$195,850
$349,700------------------------------$94,601.00---35%-----$349,700
Now if I cut every bracket who gets the *biggest benefit*?
Well, those who have the biggest potential gross dollar amount of benefit are those few whose income far exceeds $349,700.
Why?
If we cut a few percentage points off the 10, 15, 25, 28 or 33% brakets, there is a limited amount of dollars that can benefit because each of those brackets is limited in the amount dollars taxed therein. E.g., the 15% only covers about $50K, so you cut that bracket by 2% what do you get? About $1K in savings.
But what about those above $349K? It's theoretically unlimited. The very very wealthy could have $20 million or more receiving a benefit. And obviously, 2% of $20M is far more than $1K.
But as the chart in the OP demonstrates, there is so few people making that much that their combined tax savings, although great in each invidual case, on aggregate is far outweighed by the aggregate of savings of poorer taxpayers. Thus, greater progressivity results.
I.e., the great big fuss is all about a very very small number of taxpayers (probably a very small fraction of 1%) who (individually) got a big tax break.
IMO, that completely misses the mark. The ones who make about a $100M - hedge fund managers -are only paying LT cap gain rates on their income. Even the Dems (Charles Shumer in particular) refuse to repeal that tax loophole.
So, I think you who bitch about the Bush tax cuts have fallen prey to a typical Washington DC's *pea in a cup* mis-direction game - AKA "Republicans tax cuts only favor the rich" crap.
So, get rid of the hedge fund manager cap gain crap. If you wanna create another bracket that add a few % points to people making above $1M I doubt anybody would really care.
Problem is, I highly doubt that is what will be done. Hehe, Bill Clinton's "milion $ income rate bracket" actually kicked in at about $250K IIRC. Washington DC bull shit.
Fern