N
Nate13
Guest
I’ve noticed a lot of discussion about whether our tax code in America is truly “fair” or rather what we should care about “just”. The problem with many of these discussions is they lack the facts to actually be able to do a true comparison. They also fail to even bother to actually look at the state of taxes in this country on a federal level. First take a look at this website and the chart shown below:
taxfoundation.org/blog/
http://www.taxfoundation.org/UserFiles/File/Average_Tax_Rates.png
Paying an effective tax rate of 15% is a higher effective tax rate than 97% of Americans pay. 50% of Americans pay 0 federal taxes.
The problem is the tax code in America is so convoluted that it is impossible to do a comparison of rates by looking at marginal rates that everyone likes to look at. It should also be noted that dividends from stocks are taxed as normal income tax, while money earned from buying and selling stock is charged at the 15% rate. Dividends are taxed with normal income because they are known quantity of return that will come from an investment.
The income from buying and selling stock though is a much more risky venture and requires more incentive to get people to go in a buy it. The income earned from this is taxed at a the rate it is because if it were taxed higher, people would hesitate to invest because the reward from investing would drop and no longer outweigh the risk that was being taken.
I’d also point out that even looking at the effective tax rate someone pays and comparing those to each other is not enough. You also have to look at how much a person gives to charity. A rich person who donates 10% of their income to charity is going to be able to write a lot of that off, and their effective tax rate will be much lower compared to someone who only pays 1% of their income to charity. The fact is their money got where it was so supposed to go and is being used for social justice.
So is America’s tax code socially just?
taxfoundation.org/blog/
http://www.taxfoundation.org/UserFiles/File/Average_Tax_Rates.png
Paying an effective tax rate of 15% is a higher effective tax rate than 97% of Americans pay. 50% of Americans pay 0 federal taxes.
The problem is the tax code in America is so convoluted that it is impossible to do a comparison of rates by looking at marginal rates that everyone likes to look at. It should also be noted that dividends from stocks are taxed as normal income tax, while money earned from buying and selling stock is charged at the 15% rate. Dividends are taxed with normal income because they are known quantity of return that will come from an investment.
The income from buying and selling stock though is a much more risky venture and requires more incentive to get people to go in a buy it. The income earned from this is taxed at a the rate it is because if it were taxed higher, people would hesitate to invest because the reward from investing would drop and no longer outweigh the risk that was being taken.
I’d also point out that even looking at the effective tax rate someone pays and comparing those to each other is not enough. You also have to look at how much a person gives to charity. A rich person who donates 10% of their income to charity is going to be able to write a lot of that off, and their effective tax rate will be much lower compared to someone who only pays 1% of their income to charity. The fact is their money got where it was so supposed to go and is being used for social justice.
So is America’s tax code socially just?