Khross wrote:
Xequecal:
The Top Quintile, per your numbers, pays 20% of their income in taxes.
The Second Quintile, per your numbers, pays 16% of their income in taxes.
Also, I know it doesn't affect you ever, but there is this thing called the Alternative Minimum Tax, which will shunt you to a flat 39.6% if you aren't careful. No gradation either, there ...
The taxes become strictly 39.6% of the income subject to the AMT.
Please, stop spewing this nonsense that they need to pay over more of their income, because I can assure you pretty much every other bracket pays less of their income in taxes as a percentage of total income.
I pulled those numbers from your own link, it clearly shows the "top 400" as paying less than the top quintile, and only slightly more than the second quintile on average. The top 400 pay less than almost 40% of the country. It's not like the people in this group are even bothering to dispute this, everyone knows about Warren Buffet's claims of how he pays less taxes than most people and Mitt Romney admitting he only paid 13% in the year he was running for President.
I don't dispute that rich pay more in general, but the fact remains that the top 5% pay 60% of all the taxes because the top 5% have more than 60% of all the money to begin with. In addition, a progressive taxation scheme of 10% to 20% (the bottom quintile doesn't have any money to take) is hardly some kind of gross injustice. You could live in Europe and be paying 70% to fund a social safety net that you will never use, would the fact that the factory workers are also paying 60% make you feel better about it?
Timmit wrote:
It's not in any way irrelevant when some is making the incredibly stupid argument that rich people don't pay "their fair share".
Like I said before, it's a totally irrelevant red herring unless you're advocating for everyone paying a flat dollar amount in taxes. The tax system is going to be based on a percentage of something and if you want to get rid of things like capital gains taxes you need to show why the richest of the rich should pay a lower percentage than two thirds of the country.