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This does not follow at all from those numbers (and reality). Tax pressure has moved towards the middle and lower class, to ease the “burden” of the rich and wealthy.


Reality is literally the opposite of what you claim. I highly suggest you look at actually tax data and not comments from strangers on social media.

https://files.taxfoundation.org/20220119175339/The-Top-1-Per...

Tax burden for the bottom 50% has dropped. Fewer and fewer low income Americans pay any income tax at all.


Look, if the top 1% of people used to share 10% of a country's earnings, but now share 20% of a country's earnings, their relative contribution to total tax revenue will grow without any change to the tax regime.

So you need to consider the change in income distribution alongside any change in relative tax contributions. Otherwise the stats you cite are pretty meaningless


That data is available if you bother to look for it.

https://files.taxfoundation.org/20220119175430/The-Top-1-Per...

Despite the top 1% total share of income decreasing since 2007, they still pay the same percent of all taxes.

Thus the tax burden on the top 1% has increased over time.


Why pick 2007, except for the fact that it clearly looks like an outlier?

It looks to me that the general trend for the top 1% of earners has been a slight increase in both income earned and tax paid


Looking at 2007 was a peak in both income earned and taxes paid. Comparing it to today, income earned (as a %) decreased, yet taxes paid (as a % of total) is about the same.

So we can at least say from 2007 to now, tax burden increased.


Probably not a good idea to pick an unusual year as your baseline if you want a reliable conclusion.

The trend of both graphs appears to be a modest increase over time, obviously with annual fluctuations.


The tax burden for the top 1% _income_ earners can totally increase while the tax burden for the top 1% wealthy decreases (they earn from dividends, not work)


It’s literally in the data link I posted.

The top 25% saw their tax burden increase, the bottom 75% decrease.


According to your link the share of Income of the bottom 75% also decreased. Than it is not surprising to see their tax burden decrease.

Also, the trend seems to be the other way around: Tax rates of the top households have continuously decreased.

[1] https://www.sltrib.com/opinion/commentary/2019/10/07/david-l...

[1] https://static01.nyt.com/images/2019/10/04/us/tax-trump-weal...

[2] https://www.washingtonpost.com/business/2019/10/08/first-tim...

[2] https://arc-anglerfish-washpost-prod-washpost.s3.amazonaws.c...




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