Call Now: 833-803-4222
Se Habla Espanol

income taxes

Are The Super-Rich Paying Even Lower Taxes?

June 09, 2015

The United States has a progressive tax system, which means that taxpayers that earn more pay more in taxes. Lower-income groups get certain tax benefits that help them save on taxes, such as the Earned Income Tax Credit. Traditionally, statistics reveal that the super-rich pays less in taxes. New data from the IRS shows the percentage of tax individuals in different income groups pay. The Washington Post discusses:

The IRS found that as you go from being merely wealthy (the 1 percent) to super-duper wealthy (the 0.001 percent), your average federal income tax rate actually goes down. In other words, the progressivity of the federal income tax starts to fall apart at the upper reaches of the income distribution. Take a look.

The average tax paid across the top half of American society by income — the top 50 percent of earners — was 14.33 percent in 2012, according to the IRS. Climbing up the income ladder the tax rate increases to 22.83 percent for the top 1 percent of earners.

But when you start to slice that group further — all the way up to the top 0.001 percent — you’ll notice that the effective tax rate falls steadily to 17.60 percent at the very top.

In other words, a person in the top 0.001 percent income bracket — who would have an adjusted gross income of at least $62,000,000 — pays the nearly same effective tax rate as somebody in the top 20 percent bracket who makes $85,000 in adjusted gross income.

That’s not how federal income taxes were, at least originally, designed to work. The super-rich pays a relatively low rate for a variety of reasons. They benefit from a whole host of deductions — like the mortgage on a yacht, for instance — and other tax benefits that many people don’t qualify for.

Chief among these is the lower tax rate on capital gains — think investment income. That maxes out at about 24 percent when you factor in a Medicare surtax that applies to some investment income. But wages are taxed at a top rate of 39.6 percent. Since many of the super-rich get most of their earnings from investments, they disproportionately reap the benefits of that lower capital gains tax rate.

In the year this data was compiled, 2012, the top capital gains rate was lower still, at 15 percent. So it will be interesting to see whether the recent capital gains rate hike — up to a maximum of 24 percent — has much of an impact on these trends.

Some politicians, most notably Bernie Sanders, have called for higher tax rates on the super-rich. Sanders would like to see the top income tax rate rise to 90 percent, where it was back in the 1940s and 1950s.

But the numbers above suggest that simply ratcheting up the income tax and ignoring capital gains won’t take a huge bite out of inequality, particularly not among the super-rich. If policymakers wanted to really take more from the ultra-rich, they would tax investment income much more progressively.