We all know
that the fraction of a percent are different than the majority of Americans who live on
Main Street but just how different are they? With the U.S. in the middle
of a Presidential election cycle, how does this impact the tax messages that
both the Republicans and the Democrats are sending?
An analysis by the Tax Policy Center at the
Brookings Institute puts a finger on the differences through an examination of
the sources of cash income. For most of us, income is a very simple
concept; wages or salary, pension or social security and a small amount of
interest income. For the minority of Americans, the income equation is
complicated by the inclusion of dividends, rent, capital gains among others.
It is these different sources of income that separate the wealthy from
the remainder of society as you will see.
According to
the Tax Policy Center's analysis, when cash income levels are divided into five
quintiles (five groups of twenty percent each), the middle two quintiles (or
middle 40 percent) of Americans source between 70.6 and 72.9 percent of
their cash incomes from labor (i.e. working for a living) and only
between 2.9 and 3.5 percent from capital sources (i.e. capital gains and
losses, dividends, interest income and inputed corporate tax liabilities).
On the other hand, the top quintile (or top 20 percent) of Americans
source only 55.4 percent of their income from labor and 16.3 percent from
capital income as described above. In addition, the top 20 percent of
Americans source 12.2 percent of their incomes from business income, a far
greater amount than the maximum of 2.8 percent for the remaining 80 percent of
Americans.
Here is a
chart summarizing the data:
Drilling
even further into the Tax Policy Center's analysis, we find that the top 1
percent of income earners source 30 percent of their income from labor, 22.4
percent from business income and a very significant 34.8 percent from capital.
Narrowing the field even further, we find that the top 0.1 percent of
income earners source only 19.7 percent of their income from labor sources with
whopping 50.5 percent coming from capital income and 23.8 percent coming from
business sources.
You'll
notice the first column in the chart above is labeled "Percent of Total
American Cash Income". This column tells us that the bottom 80 percent
of American income earners bring home only 45.2 percent of all cash income
(3.7+8.4+13.4+19.8 with rounding) while the top 20 percent bring home 54.8
percent of the total cash income. The top 1 percent bring home 16.9
percent of the total and the top 0.1 percent bring home 7.8 percent of
America's total cash income.
When
politicians propose changes to the individual tax code, particularly reductions
in taxes paid on certain types of income, we need to keep this information in
mind. Unless income taxes are reduced across the board on all types of
income, it is quite apparent that certain socio-economic groups will benefit
more than others when tax reductions are selective and that income will be transferred from one level of society to another. Right, Mr. Romney?
I am convinced the GOP does not understand economics. As you so astutely pointed out, their "god" Ronald Reagan and this supposed golden age was merely a buying on credit with the piper to be paid sometime in the future. That's not prosperity, that's a temporary reprieve.
ReplyDeleteViable Opposition - Aug 9/2011
America's Presidents: Who was the biggest spendthrift?
http://viableopposition.blogspot.com/2011/08/americas-presidents-who-was-biggest.html