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Fair share? Top 400 taxpayers paid almost as much income taxes in 2014 as entire bottom 50% – top 0.001% paid more

Fair share? Top 400 taxpayers paid almost as much income taxes in 2014 as entire bottom

Mark J. Perry@Mark_J_Perry
December 30, 2016 1:03 pm | AEIdea

taxes1We hear all the time that “the rich aren’t paying their fair share of taxes” (you’ll find more than 4,000,000 Google search results for that phrase). In a 2013 video at the start of this second term, President Obama celebrated his tax increases that “make our tax code more progressive than it’s been in decades,” but then reiterated his belief that the wealthiest Americans still aren’t paying their “fair share” of taxes.  Here’s an analysis using recent IRS data that suggests otherwise.

1. In 2014, the top 400 US taxpayers based on Adjusted Gross Income earned $127 billion collectively, and they paid $29.4 billion collectively in federal income taxes at an average tax rate of 23.13% (see chart above). Just those 400 taxpayers paid more than 2% of all the federal income taxes collected in 2014 ($29.4 billion out of $1.377 trillion).

2. In 2014, the bottom 50% of taxpayers, a group totaling nearly 70 million Americans, earned collectively more than $1 trillion and paid $37.7 billion in federal income taxes at average tax rate of about 3.4% (see chart above).

Update:

3. According to the IRS, the top 0.001 percent of US taxpayers (N = 1,396) paid $49.7 billion in federal income tax in 2014, which is $12 billion more than the taxes collected from the entire bottom 50% (see updated chart above). Also, because of the progressive income tax schedule, note that the bottom 50% of US taxpayers reported about 5 times as much income as the top 1/1000 of 1% (more than $1 trillion vs. $207 billion), but paid $12 billion (and 24%) less in income taxes in 2014.

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Ridgewood High School Takes Third in the Fed Challenge

money-printing-press

April 28,2016

the syaff of the Ridgewood blog
Ridgewood NJ, The RHS Federal Challenge team took Third place in the final round of the competition that is run by the Federal Reserve Bank of New York on behalf of the United States Federal Reserve system. The competition asks groups of high school students to research the domestic/global economy, develop a mathematical model for forecasting the domestic economy, present their research to a panel of high-ranking economists working at the FRBNY, and answer complex questions about both the team’s research and the economy.