The latest IRS data on who bears the income tax burden demonstrate yet again the benefits of lower tax rates over higher rates.

When President Donald Trump entered office, the richest 1% of tax filers ($675,000 income and above) paid a little more than 40% of the income taxes collected.

The 2017 Trump tax cut reduced the effective highest federal tax rate to 37% from 42%.

But the most recent IRS tax return data (for 2021) confirm that even as these rates were lowered — not to mention the corporate tax rate cut from 35% to 21% — the share of the tax burden shouldered by the 1% rose to almost 46%.

Written by the guy who came up with the Laffer Curve, Arthur Laffer.

  • shalafi@lemmy.world
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    9 months ago

    Damned interesting! OTOH, the wealth gap has exploded since 1980, so it seems natural that the 1%, being so very much richer, and the rest of us being so very much poorer (in relation!), would bear a higher percentage of the total tax burden.

    Can someone explain more? I’m no finance guy, but I’d guess there’s more than a 1-1 relationship here.

    • BigWheelPowerBrakeSlider@lemmy.world
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      9 months ago

      Your post is almost word for word what I was going to post, right down to the “I’m no finance guy.” But yeah, greater concentration of wealth in the 1% in comparison to everyone else seemingly should result in increased tax share.

    • Jesusaurus@lemmy.world
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      9 months ago

      Easy enough to understand with simple ratios. If the top 1% holds 50% of the nation’s wealth, we would expect they should pay somewhere around 50% of the nation’s taxes. If their wealth increases to 60% you would expect the amount of taxes they pay to go up by a relatively equal amount.

      Conversely the lower 99% would pay an inverse proportion of taxes. If the wealthy are becoming propositionally more wealthy, the less wealthy should be paying less of the nation’s taxes.

      Now, that doesn’t necessarily mean that someone in the 99% will actually pay less taxes, as their wealth is not increasing at the rate of the 1%. It just means that the wealthy should be paying more as their proportion of the nation’s wealth keeps growing.

      • jimbolauski@lemm.ee
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        9 months ago

        Your 1% has 50% of the wealth stat has been telephoned to what you’re parroting now. The original stat is the 1% has more wealth than the bottom 50% combined. This stat stopped being used because it got exposed for being misleading. The bottom 20% has negative wealth and it’s not until the 35% - 40% that there is positive combined wealth. A single person in the 21st percentile has more wealth than the bottom 40% combined. What that stat is really saying is the 1% have more wealth than the combined wealth of people between 40% - 50%.

        • Jesusaurus@lemmy.world
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          9 months ago

          I was making up numbers as an example, but seems the more accurate estimate is the top 10% hold 66% of the nation’s wealth.

    • PeepinGoodArgs@reddthat.comOP
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      9 months ago

      seems natural that the 1%, being so very much richer, and the rest of us being so very much poorer (in relation!), would bear a higher percentage of the total tax burden.

      That’s another point that I hadn’t considered. The rest of us are just less able to shoulder more of the tax burden and, as a result, the 1% end up doing more. And/or the TCJA lowered the marginal tax rates, which just resulted in a shift of the tax burden, such that everybody was paying less in taxes, but they paid a higher percentage.

  • Dagwood222@lemm.ee
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    9 months ago

    Gee, it’s almost as if a massive increase in wealth resulted in a slight increase in taxes paid.

  • TORFdot0@lemmy.world
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    9 months ago

    There is validity in the logic that lower effective tax rates lead to higher gross receipts. That is totally unrelated to the percentage of tax paid by the highest 1%. Other than a way to dunk (as long as you don’t think about it too hard) on democrats who hammer the “pay your fair share” line, it’s completely irrelevant.

    Take the author, Arthur Laffer, with a grain a salt. Kansas for instance, took his taxation advice back in 2012, eliminating corporate taxes on pass through entities and slashing the tax brackets to just two and it failed so hard that they voted to repeal them and elect a democrat as governor after 6 years of budget crisis

  • mirror_slap@lemmy.world
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    9 months ago

    What a nonsense article. The rich paid more because they’ve made 10 trillion on the market while normal people were busy getting wrecked by inflation. The rich don’t pay income taxes on market gains, they pay capital gains taxes. I can’t believe idiots fall for this stuff.

    • PizzaMan@lemm.ee
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      9 months ago

      It’s a shitty source from a community with no source standards. So you’re bound to find shitty titles like this one.

  • intensely_human@lemm.ee
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    9 months ago

    Was there a change in tax enforcement? This really isn’t enough data points to establish a causality, given there could be so many other factors.

  • Neuromancer@lemm.eeM
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    9 months ago

    This post was reported. Rule 2 says the post must be right wing or show a flaw with left wing. Paraphrasing.

    This fits rule 2 as it’s show the trope the rich don’t pay their taxes and tax cuts benefit the rich is false.

    The rich ended up paying more in taxes as predicted.

  • Neuromancer@lemm.eeM
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    9 months ago

    Trump made many changes that impacted high income earners. The salt deduction was a major one.