bilby
Fair dinkum thinkum
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Who cares about quintiles. We all know that the upper quintile or the upper part of the upper quintile controls the wealth. Therefore they should be paying the taxes in proportion that support that wealth, which they do not. If I control 90% of the wealth I should be paying 90% of the taxes. That is certainly not the case in the U.S.The figures presented in the OP might or might not indicate that taxation, adjusted for 'transfers', in the US is (highly) progressive; let's accept, for the sake of argument that it does show this.
The real question, that these figures cannot answer, because they only tell half the story, is 'is this a good or a bad thing?' or to put it another way 'how progressive should taxation be in the US, and is the progressiveness right now too high, too low, or about right?'
It seems to me that the ideal level of progressiveness in taxes and transfers would be just sufficient to offset the tendency inherent in the economy towards wealth concentration.
We can see that wealth is becoming increasingly concentrated in the US; from this, I conclude that regardless of how progressive the current tax structure might be, it needs to be more progressive, in order to achieve the best outcomes for the majority of the people.
The absolute numbers, and even the ratios of tax paid by percentile, are irrelevant; I am sure nobody is surprised to discover that taxation after transfers is progressive. But if wealth concentration is still occurring fairly rapidly, that fact in itself is sufficient to indicate that the regime is not sufficiently progressive to achieve the optimum result for all Americans.
Quite.
