Food for thought. How much is a fair share of taxes? One of the things we hear a lot is that those in the upper income brackets should pay a fair share of taxes. Is paying almost 38% of all the income taxes paid a fair share? That's how much the 1% top earners paid in income tax in 2013.
People usually miss the part about cost of living expense. Tax is how society takes care of it's own. When you tax low income earners without taking into account the cost of living, what is happening is a syphon up effect. Where the poor are sacrificing themselves and their children to pay tax for the purpose of supporting those better off than them. That makes no sense.
When you remove the cost of living from income and then see how much each person pays in tax relative to that, it is always the bottom 50% that pay far more percentage wise. Usually to obscene amounts.
But, it's more convenient to ignore that and point out how people that can afford to live well pay more taxes than those who's suffering allows society to flourish.
SciFiFisher wrote:For clarification. (since I started this on Facebook) the 38% number is essentially the percentage of all the taxes paid. So, in essence for $1 of tax collected the 1% are paying 38 cents of all taxes paid. This is not the actual percentage of their income. According to the data that is actually about 7%.
So, the original question that started this is "what is a fair share taxes?"
geonuc wrote:I think the current rate structure is fair, or close enough.
That 41.5 percent represents nearly 49 million families, notes Josh Bivens at the left-leaning Economic Policy Institute. While median family wealth fell by 38.8 percent, Bivens wrote, the wealth of the Walton family members rose from $73.3 billion in 2007 to $89.5 billion in 2010, or about 22 percent growth.
Wealth inequality in the US is at near record levels according to a new study by academics. Over the past three decades, the share of household wealth owned by the top 0.1% has increased from 7% to 22%. For the bottom 90% of families, a combination of rising debt, the collapse of the value of their assets during the financial crisis, and stagnant real wages have led to the erosion of wealth.
vendic wrote:The gap is growing. Something will break. It's just a question of when and how.
vendic wrote:The problem is that all it will take is a trigger and, no one knows when that is coming or what it will be and no one is interested in unloading the gun.
grapes wrote:So, the Zuckerburgs have announced they will give away 99% of their wealth (someday), which seems to mean they keep (scribble scribble) a paltry $500 million
SciFiFisher wrote:grapes wrote:So, the Zuckerburgs have announced they will give away 99% of their wealth (someday), which seems to mean they keep (scribble scribble) a paltry $500 million
Well, sort of. But, the good news is that the Zuckerberg's and the Gates are a growing phenomenon among what I consider to be the "new rich". A significant number of these billionaires are pledging to give away at least 50% of their wealth for "worthy causes."
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