But he is wrong on his 1%. The income threshold for the top 1 percent of taxpayers is roughly $370,000 not $1 million. I'm still puzzled on how Senator Conrad aims to extract $200 billion per year in additional taxes from this elite group of taxpayers since that's almost as much as they are already paying under current tax rates.
Let's look at the data. According to the IRS statistics for 2008 (latest available):
• There were 321,294 tax returns with AGI above $1 million (0.2 percent of returns).
• The total AGI for these returns was $1.076 trillion (13 percent of all AGI).
• Their taxable income was $934 billion.
• Their total income tax was $249 billion (24 percent of all income taxes paid).
So, if Conrad is going to raise $2 trillion from millionaires, he is going to either (1) need more millionaires or, (2) nearly double the amount of tax collections from existing millionaires.
How do you do the latter without doubling tax rates? Good luck. As the states that enacted so-called millionaire's taxes discovered, higher tax rates on millionaires tend to result in fewer millionaires and less taxes collected from them. Class warfare tax policy is simply not an effective means of funding government.
How do you do the latter without doubling tax rates? Good luck. As the states that enacted so-called millionaire's taxes discovered, higher tax rates on millionaires tend to result in fewer millionaires and less taxes collected from them. Class warfare tax policy is simply not an effective means of funding government.