top 1400 tax payers zeroed their taxes here
That old canard again? I thought we dealt with that before I went on vacation. For the record, the implication that the "top 1400 tax payers zeroed their taxes" is misleading. According to
http://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-soi/09inalcr.pdf in 2009,
of the 235,413 taxpayers who earned $1 million or more in 2009, 1,470 of them paid no taxes. That is,
0.6% - one out of every 167 - of those making over $1 million payed no taxes. That's a bit different than the "top 1400 tax payers zeroed their taxes".
As previously discussed, all that means is they suffered sufficient losses or had other legitimate ways to lower their adjusted gross income to where they paid no taxes. Let me ask you this - do you take every deduction you are entitled to? Why shouldn't someone else do the same, simply because they make more money than you?
Let me ask you another question - if you earned 1 million dollars from your salary and/or primary business or whatever, but through other investments, business ventures, etc. lost 1 million dollars (or more), what should your taxable income be?
Top 5% now pays taxes at net effective rate equal to middle class (ard 17.4%)
Would love to see the source for that, given that from IRS and other sources it is a bit higher than that, better than 20%:
The top 5% each earned $159,619 or more in income (as of 2008,
http://www.taxfoundation.org/news/show/250.html)
The top 5% earned 34.7% of the nation's income. (as of 2008,
http://www.taxfoundation.org/news/show/250.html)
The top 5% paid 58.72% of federal income taxes (as of 2008,
http://ntu.org/tax-basics/who-pays-income-taxes.html)
Total income taxes collected in 2008: 1,031,580,923,000 (just over 1 trillion dollars) (
http://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-soi/08in12ms.xls)
So, then we can see that:
Total income taxes collected from top 5%: 605,000,000,000 (rounded to nearest billion)
Total taxable income from top 5%: 2,867,000,000,000 (rounded to nearest billion)
Effective tax rate for top 5%:
21.1%Hmm. Apply math to verifiable data from published sources and come up with repeatable results. Gotta love that, don't you?
yet their incomes have soared while middle class incomes have dropped...same with poor,,,now poorer than ever.
Odd, here's what the Census bureau shows (
http://www.census.gov/hhes/www/income/data/historical/inequality/H03AR_2009.xls):
For the 10 years ending 2009 (the last year census data is available):
The mean (average) income for the lowest 20% of households increased by 16.5%
The mean (average) income for the second 20% of households increased by 20.2%
The mean (average) income for the third 20% of households increased by 21.6%
The mean (average) income for the fourth 20% of households increased by 24.1%
The mean (average) income for the fifth 20% of households increased by 26.3%
The mean (average) income for the top 5% of households increased by 25.7%
Huh. Income for all groups increased, and one could hardly call 25.7% over 10 years - an average of 2.57% per year - "soaring". Once again, facts and math win out over unfounded speculation.
Just a Shooter