The
Internal Revenue Service has recently released the latest edition of its Individual Income
Tax Shares brochure for 2015. This publication provides us with
statistics on adjusted gross income (AGI) distribution and income tax by
cumulative percentiles of returns, giving us an accurate sense of wealth
distribution in America and how it has changed over the past decade. Let's
dive in.
For the 2015 tax year, nondependent
taxpayers filed a total of 141,204,625 million individual income tax returns,
up 1.2 percent on a year-over-year basis as shown here:
In total, adjusted gross income
reached $10.14 trillion in 2015, an increase of 4.5 percent on a year-over-year
basis and total individual income tax paid rose by 5.8 percent to $1.45
trillion. The average tax rate for all individual returns filed for the
2015 tax year was 14.34 percent, the highest over the past decade as shown
here:
Let's start by looking at the top
half of earners. For the 2015 tax year, the median adjusted gross income
was $39,275; these taxpayers accounted for 88.7 percent of total adjusted gross
income and paid 97.2 percent of total individual income tax compared to 11.3
percent an 2.8 percent for the bottom 50 percent of returns. Here is a
graphic showing the percentage of total income tax revenue and adjusted gross
income varies with various percentiles of adjusted growth income thresholds for
2015:
Here is a graphic showing how the
adjusted gross income threshold for the top 50 percent of returns has varied
over the decade between 2006 and 2015:
As you can see, the Great Recession
had a very significant impact on the gross income threshold for the top half of
earners, dropping from $22,320 in 2006 to a low of $20,234 in 2011 and back up
to $21,663 in 2015 (in constant dollars).
Now, let's look at the one percent
and better. The top 1 percent of tax returns had an adjusted gross income
threshold of $480,930 or more and accounted for 20.7 percent of total adjusted
gross income and paid 39 percent of total income tax paid by American
individuals. Here is a graphic showing how the adjusted gross income
threshold for the top 1 percent of tax returns has varied over the past decade
along with a comparison of the thresholds for the top 2, 5 and 10 percent for
comparison:
The average adjusted gross income
for all individuals in the top 1 percent was $1,483,596, up from a low of
$983,734 in 2009 but still lower than the decade peak of $1,485,826 reached in
2007 just as the Great Recession was born.
Let's move to the highest of the
highs, the very top of the income heap. Here is a table showing the adjusted
growth income threshold history for the top 0.001, 0.01, 0.1, 1, 2, 3 and 4
percentiles (from left to right) of returns:
The top 0.001 percent had an
adjusted gross income of $59.38 million or more, up 4.2 percent on a
year-over-year basis. While this seems very high to pretty much all of
us, in fact, it is down from its peak of $62.995 million in the 2007 tax year
as shown on this graphic:
With total adjusted gross income of
$214.6 billion, these individuals accounted for 2.12 percent of total adjusted
gross income from all Americans and 3.53 percent of total individual income
tax, down from 3.62 percent on a year-over-year basis. The average
adjusted gross income for these lofty earners was $152.0 million compared to an
average of $71,829 for all tax returns. What is particularly interesting
about the 0.001 percent, is that their average tax rates are significantly
lower than all percentiles from 0.01 percent to 3 percent as shown here:
You will notice that the lower
average income tax for the top 0.001 percentile has been lower than their
somewhat less wealthy peers for at least the last decade.
Lastly, here is a graphic showing
the percentage of total adjusted growth income and total individual income tax
paid for the top 1 percent and better:
When looking at tax rates, in 2017,
the top 0.001 percent paid an average of 23.93 percent compared to 27.1 percent
for the top 1 percent, 23.68 percent for the top 5 percent, 21.37 percent for
the top 10 percent and 15.71 percent for the top 50 percent.
While politicians love to tout the
advantages of their "tax plan of the day", this data clearly shows us
that the very highest of American earners have a significant tax advantage,
largely because the current tax code favours capital gains over earned income,
a situation that Washington is highly unlikely to change any time soon.
This graph also shows how the tax system has treated one part of
America preferentially over another:
In 1950, Washington's revenue from corporate taxes equaled its tax revenue from individuals; in 2016, Corporate America paid $401.2 billion in taxes compared to $1540.5 billion for individuals, a nearly fourfold difference. Does that seem like a fair tax system?
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