Richest
Americans See Their Income Share Grow
By Jesse Drucker
25/09/08 "The
Wall Street Journal"
-- 23/09/08 -- In a new sign of increasing inequality in
the U.S., the richest 1% of Americans in 2006 garnered the
highest share of the nation's adjusted gross income for two
decades, and possibly the highest since 1929, according to
Internal Revenue Service data.
Meanwhile, the average tax rate
of the wealthiest 1% fell to its lowest level in at least 18
years. The group's share of the tax burden has risen, though
not as quickly as its share of income.
The figures are from the IRS's
income-statistics division and were posted on the agency's
Web site last week. The 2006 data are the most recent
available.
The figures about the relative
income and tax rates of the wealthiest Americans come as the
presumptive presidential candidates are in a debate about
taxes. Congress and the next president will have to decide
whether to extend several Bush-era tax cuts, including the
2003 reduction in tax rates on capital gains and dividends.
Experts said those tax cuts in particular are playing a
major role in falling tax rates for the very wealthy.
Sen. John McCain has
proposed extending the lower tax rates of 15% on long-term
capital gains and dividends that apply to most taxpayers,
while Sen. Barack Obama has said he will seek to raise them
to at least 20%, the rate before the 2003 cut, and possibly
higher.
According to the figures,
the richest 1% reported 22% of the nation's total adjusted
gross income in 2006. That is up from 21.2% a year earlier,
and is the highest in the 19 years that the IRS has kept
strictly comparable figures. The 1988 level was 15.2%.
Earlier IRS data show the last year the share of income
belonging to the top 1% was at such a high level as it was
in 2006 was in 1929, but changes in measuring income make a
precise comparison difficult.
The average tax rate in 2006
for the top 1%, based on adjusted gross income, was 22.8%,
down slightly from 2005 and the fifth straight year of
declines. The average tax rate of this group was 28.9% in
1996, and was 24% in 1988.
As the wealthiest Americans'
share of income has risen, so has their share of the
income-tax burden. The group paid 39.9% of all income taxes
in 2006, compared with 27.6% in 1988. In the most recently
reported five years, however, the share of income reported
by the very wealthy has risen faster than the group's share
of income taxes.
The IRS data look only at
so-called adjusted gross income, which is reported on tax
returns, and focus only on income taxes. A report by the
Congressional Budget Office late last year, which used wider
definitions of both income and taxes, found similar trends.
Joel
Slemrod, a tax economist at the University of
Michigan's business school, said that some portion of the
increase in income for the top 1% could stem from the
increasing shift to entities such as partnerships, which
means some income previously reported by businesses is now
reported by individuals. Larger factors likely include
changes in trade policy and other aspects of the
increasingly global economy, he said.
Write to
Jesse Drucker at
jesse.drucker@wsj.com
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