Interesting Income & Tax statistics
Apr. 26th, 2004 03:55 pmSource 1 & Source 2
Average Pre-tax family income by percentile
(in projected 1999 US Dollars)
The Wealthiest 20% of Americans (23.6 Million families) earn an average of $132,000 per year
The Upper Middle Class 20% of Americans (22.6 Million families) earn an average of $53,000
The Middle Class 20% of Americans (22.5 Million families) earn an average of $35,400
The Lower Middle Class 20% (23.3 Million families) earn an average of $21,200
The Poorest 20% (22.7 Million families) earn an average of $8,400
The national average for all (116 million) families is $49,500
The Wealthiest 1% of Americans (1.2 million families) earn an average of $719,000
The Wealthiest 5% of Americans (5.9 million families) earns an average of $276,000
The Wealthiest 10% of Americans (11.9 Million families) earns an average of $188,000
Who shoulders the burden?
Legend

Income Tax Burden (1977-1995)


1999 Projected Tax Burden

or to put it more succinctly
out of every income tax dollar that is collected
the poorest pay 1 cent
the lower middle class pay 5 cent
the middle class pays 11 cents
the upper middle class pays 19 cents
and the wealthiest americans pay 65 cents
the wealthiest one percent of americans (or 1.2 million families)
pay 21 cents out of every income tax dollar collected
as much as I am not a big fan of Bush
I have to admit these numbers
make his tax cut plan seem quite a bit more fair
The wealthiest 20% earn roughly 53.7% of the taxed income
but pay 65% percent of the income tax collected
80% or roughly 91.1 Million American families
earn 46.3% of the taxable income
pay 35% of the income tax collected
20% or 23.6 Million American families
generate 116% of the income of the other 80%
Each of the 23.6 million wealthiest american families
generates on average 2.276/million% of the total income in the US
While the remainder of 91.1 million familes which makes up for the rest of you
generates on average 0.5/million% of the total income in the US
Whichs means that average wealthiest family (20%) generates 4.5 times
the income of the average american family (80%)
The Average 80% family pays 0.38/million% of the income tax collected
The Average 20% family pays 2.75/million% of the income tax collected
or 7.25 times as much as the rest of you.
So while they earn 4.5 times as much as you
They pay 7.25 times as much in taxes
This points to a fairly large income gap in the US
and while depending on your politics
you may feel it is the deserved result of industrious
or a sign of larger social problems
Below are the numbers which I used for the total and per capita income % statistics
which were generated by multiplying the average income for a group
by the population of that group to obtain rough total income for the populations
[yes I am aware of the inadequacies of the method, but it accurate enough]
$3,115,200,000,000 Highest Quintile
$1,197,800,000,000 Fourth Quintile
$796,500,000,000 Middle Quintile
$493,960,000,000 Second Quintile
$190,680,000,000 Lowest Quintile
80% subtotal
$2,678,940,000,000
Total:
$5,794,140,000,000
Average Pre-tax family income by percentile
(in projected 1999 US Dollars)
The Wealthiest 20% of Americans (23.6 Million families) earn an average of $132,000 per year
The Upper Middle Class 20% of Americans (22.6 Million families) earn an average of $53,000
The Middle Class 20% of Americans (22.5 Million families) earn an average of $35,400
The Lower Middle Class 20% (23.3 Million families) earn an average of $21,200
The Poorest 20% (22.7 Million families) earn an average of $8,400
The national average for all (116 million) families is $49,500
The Wealthiest 1% of Americans (1.2 million families) earn an average of $719,000
The Wealthiest 5% of Americans (5.9 million families) earns an average of $276,000
The Wealthiest 10% of Americans (11.9 Million families) earns an average of $188,000
Who shoulders the burden?
Legend

Income Tax Burden (1977-1995)


1999 Projected Tax Burden

or to put it more succinctly
out of every income tax dollar that is collected
the poorest pay 1 cent
the lower middle class pay 5 cent
the middle class pays 11 cents
the upper middle class pays 19 cents
and the wealthiest americans pay 65 cents
the wealthiest one percent of americans (or 1.2 million families)
pay 21 cents out of every income tax dollar collected
as much as I am not a big fan of Bush
I have to admit these numbers
make his tax cut plan seem quite a bit more fair
The wealthiest 20% earn roughly 53.7% of the taxed income
but pay 65% percent of the income tax collected
80% or roughly 91.1 Million American families
earn 46.3% of the taxable income
pay 35% of the income tax collected
20% or 23.6 Million American families
generate 116% of the income of the other 80%
Each of the 23.6 million wealthiest american families
generates on average 2.276/million% of the total income in the US
While the remainder of 91.1 million familes which makes up for the rest of you
generates on average 0.5/million% of the total income in the US
Whichs means that average wealthiest family (20%) generates 4.5 times
the income of the average american family (80%)
The Average 80% family pays 0.38/million% of the income tax collected
The Average 20% family pays 2.75/million% of the income tax collected
or 7.25 times as much as the rest of you.
So while they earn 4.5 times as much as you
They pay 7.25 times as much in taxes
This points to a fairly large income gap in the US
and while depending on your politics
you may feel it is the deserved result of industrious
or a sign of larger social problems
Below are the numbers which I used for the total and per capita income % statistics
which were generated by multiplying the average income for a group
by the population of that group to obtain rough total income for the populations
[yes I am aware of the inadequacies of the method, but it accurate enough]
$3,115,200,000,000 Highest Quintile
$1,197,800,000,000 Fourth Quintile
$796,500,000,000 Middle Quintile
$493,960,000,000 Second Quintile
$190,680,000,000 Lowest Quintile
80% subtotal
$2,678,940,000,000
Total:
$5,794,140,000,000
no subject
Date: 2004-04-26 12:54 pm (UTC)1) what is a progressive tax:
bleeding heart spin
-------------------
Considering tax burden on the amount of GROSS tax paid vs. GROSS income (GI) earned is folly, as you should be considering the amount of tax paid as a percentage of 'disposable' income (DI) where DI=GI-S (that is the gross income-minus what you need to survive). This is the motivating factor having a progressive income tax, because the 'rich' are most certainly able to 'afford' to pay more. The question here, of course is how much is 'what you need to survive'. I hear tell of some folks formerly of the pacific NW who regularly smoked $200 cigars... Are those necessary to survive? What about the poor bastard coding in SF for $60k/year but can't find a decent place to live? How does he compare to some lawyer making $60k/year living in butfuck Iowa who lives in an ancentral mansion?
heartless free-market spin
--------------------------
Let's consider this idea of 'disposable' income for a minute. Where does it come from? Most rich folks don't get their money selling crap to other rich folks... They get it from selling crap at high profit to poor folks. If you decrease the tax burden on the rich (increasing in the sort term their disposable income), you will utimately take a larger bite of the percentage of disposable income available for the poor folks (whose backs the rich live off of), making them less able to buy the latest GI joe with the kung fu grip. This will utimately lead to a decrease in revenue, and ultimately profits (and their long term disposable income).
2) Your numbers aren't comparing things to support your argument
Dubya's tax cuts don't affect people making less than 200K/year (or the top 5 percent of the earners... What is the distribution of income/taxes paid in this subset of the one you used for your analysis? That is do they really pay such a large portion of the tax pie? I doubt it...
no subject
Date: 2004-04-26 02:48 pm (UTC)whether the government should do that is a seperate question.
As for the distrubution of income/taxes in my analysis, I used rough estimations to generate a quote/unquote GDP type figure comparison between the top 20% and the bottom 80%
As for them really paying such a large portion of the pie, the CBO reported that in the tax year referrence (1995 I believe) 65 cents of every income tax dollar collected were from people who earned an income placing them in the top quintile of society, which seems pretty clear cut.
no subject
Date: 2004-04-26 03:02 pm (UTC)Also, how do you reconcile your back of the envelope calculations that seem to suggest that the pay disparity between rich and poor is about 4 times (that is, those in the bottom 20% to those in the top 20%), when there are other studies that suggest the gap between CEOs and their workers jumped to something closer to 200 times (from about 20 in the seventies)?
I'm guessing you are masking some really profound outliers when lumping the whole shebang into quintiles.
I guess all I'm saying is it doesn't surprise me. Further, I have perfect faith in the free market (that is: if it was really a burden those that paid wouldn't)