SVreX wrote:
Oh boy...
Guess I stepped in it. Obviously people would much rather argue politics than make any attempt at trying to understand the question.
Better watch out, boys. Margie's about to have to come and lock it up.
Here's my answer to the article- I find doubt in their data. So I decide to look it up on IRS.gov to find statistics- you can to- http://www.irs.gov/taxstats/indtaxstats/article/0,,id=96981,00.html#_grp8
So first, I look at the individual returns, and see that as income goes up, barely levels off, or actually goes down to 22% if you make over 10M in 2009. Interesting- one would think that the amount of deductions one needs the richer you get goes down, so that more of the income you get can be taxed. But no, it does not. (that's the 2009 individual return data).
Oh, as for earnings- the top 0.5% ($500k and up) earns about 15.6% of the reported income. Well, I say earned lightly- that $500k and up accounts for only 8.6% of the salaries and wages, which is what we call earned income. They had an overwhelming 72.9% of all reported capital gains. Interesting.
As for earning, there's a nice table on where income comes from- it's interesting to see that for people reporting over $10M in income, the average income for that bracket is about $29M, but the average salary/wage is only $6.7. So basically, the average person who reports income over $10M brings in only 23% of their income in wages, the rest is from other income.
I know I don't even come close to earning my living via investments....
So, lets look at just the argument about capital gains- more about what is being lost in tax revenue. 2007 is the last Capital gains data the IRS puts up- but in it, it brackets the millionaires perfectly. In 2007, people earning over $1M reported at total of $565 Trillion in long term capitol gains (about 350k returns, there, or an average long term gain income of almost $1.5M per report).
So our start is $565,829,263,000 of income.
At the current rate if 15%, that's $84.9B in taxes.
If you adjust that to just the average rate of pay for the range, which is 25%, that's $141.4B, an increase of almost $60B. Somehow, the article you posted claims only $5B, and I'm not sure where they get that math.
If you adjust it to normal income tax rate of 35%, it's $198B of tax revenue, over $100B MORE revenue.
This is simple math with the data provided by the IRS. How that's twisted to $5B, is beyond me. Again, you can read the simple math here- the IRS invividual statistics site- http://www.irs.gov/taxstats/indtaxstats/article/0,,id=96981,00.html#_grp8
Maybe when we read articles, real citation of data would be nice, as opposed to one like the Forbes article, that then goes on to argue policy.