The Millionaires Who Pay the Highest Tax Rate
By: Robert Frank
CNBC Reporter & Editor
CNBC Reporter & Editor
Warren
Buffett and Mitt Romney have managed to create one of the enduring
myths of our tax debate: that the rich pay a lower rate than the rest of
America.
Mike Kemp | Getty Images
|
But
nationally, the tax code is still broadly progressive. The more your
make, the more taxes you pay as a percentage of your income.
According to new data
from the IRS, people who make $1 million or more had an average tax
rate of 20.4 percent in 2010. Tax filers who earned $30,000 to $50,000
paid an average rate of 4.8 percent, while those who made between
$50,000 and $100,000 paid 7.7 percent. Those making under $30,000 had a
negative effective rate, meaning they paid no federal income taxes after
deductions and credits.
Put another way, millionaires pay a rate that’s more than four times that of the middle class.
One
caveat: Rates go up as income goes up — but only to a point. Once you
hit a certain magic number among super-high earners, your tax rates
start to fall slightly.
According
to the IRS, average tax rates increase as income increases — until you
get to around $1.5 million in annual income. Once you make $2 million,
average tax rates start to decrease. The average tax rate peaks at 25.1
percent for those making between $1.5 million and $2 million.
After that it starts to go down, and falls to 20.7 percent for those making $10 million or more.
So
the millionaires who pay the highest average tax rates in America are
those who make between $1.5 million and $2 million. That $2 million
could be called the “Top Turning Point” on the income ladder, where
rates reverse. (Related: Where the 1 Percent Live)
The
reasons for this aren’t complicated. Once you get above $2 million,
your share of income from investments increases. Investments are
generally taxed at the 15 percent capital-gains rate, compared with the
top ordinary-income rate of 35 percent.
Those making $10 million or more earned nearly half of their income from capital gains and dividends.
Rates
don’t fall all that much once you get above $10 million. Even among the
top 400 earners in America, whose average income is more than $200
million, the average rate is 18 percent — still more than three times
the rate paid by the middle class.
Both
sides of the current political debate on taxes will no doubt see these
data differently. The right will say that the rich already pay more than
their fair share, while the left will point to the low rates paid by
the wealthy relative to the official tax rates.
But the figures show that the more you make, the more you pay — up to the Top Turning Point.
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