This is wrong.
The bottom 3 quintiles of income earners are an average net-negative tax contributor in the US. I did the math, myself. The gap only got wider when I redid the numbers for 2020 tax data (the original work I did was for 2015 tax data).
Only the top 2 quintiles of income earners are net positive tax contributors.
So this is the American Rich giving to the Rich of other countries.
Unless you make over $85K a year, you're likely a net negative tax contributor.
https://www.taxpolicycenter.org/statistics/household-income-quintiles
True but don't forget everyone pays the inflation tax an equal share of their wealth.
Appreciate your input. Another person pointed out the excise taxes folks pay, too (we pay federal taxes on things like gasoline and imports).
Interesting. Are indirect/excise taxes included in those calculations? VAT? Not too great with tax structure where I live, let alone the US.
Yes. Since I got it from this site, they included it. The excise taxes, at the federal level, accounted for only 3% of the federal tax revenue.
https://taxfoundation.org/excise-taxes-excise-tax-trends/
This analysis did not include local/state taxes. Only federal taxes.
Cheers!
(post is archived)