…AND WHY THE TOP 1% PAY A MUCH LOWER TAX RATE THAN YOU
By Robert Reich with video at the end of the article
But you’d be wrong. Many millionaires pay a lower
federal tax rate than many middle-class Americans.
Some don’t pay any federal taxes at all. That’s because they‘re allowed to deduct from their
taxable income such things as large interest payments on mortgages for huge
homes, also the costs of business entertainment and conferences (aka
vacations at golf resorts), and gold plated health care plans.
Some also take advantage of tax loopholes that let them park some of their earnings in offshore tax havens like the Bahamas or the Netherlands Antilles.
And other loopholes that allow them to treat some income as
capital gains – subject to a much lower tax rate than ordinary income. If you
happen to be a hedge-fund or private-equity manager, there’s a capital gains
loophole designed especially for you.
Consider the Social Security payroll tax and the situation
is even more lopsided. That tax applies to every dollar of income up to a cap —
which this year is $117,000. Anything earned above the cap is not subject to
Social Security taxes at all – meaning anyone with a high income pays a much
smaller percentage of it in Social Security taxes than most people do.
Put these all together and you see why Warren Buffet, the
second richest person in America, pays a lower tax rate than his secretary, as
he readily admits.
State and local taxes are even more regressive. The poorest
fifth of Americans pay an average state and local tax rate of over 11 percent,
while the richest fifth pay only 5.6 percent. This isn’t small
change. State and local taxes account for about 40 percent of all government
revenues.
Believe it or not, Republicans want to make all this worse
by cutting taxes on the wealthy even more. Paul Ryan’s new budget doesn’t just
slice Medicare, education, and food stamps. It also lowers the top federal tax
rate to 25 percent.
When the rich are let off the hook in all these ways, the
rest of America has to pay more in taxes to make up the difference – or have
services cut because government doesn’t have the funds.