Originally posted by TweetyBird
>>Yes the employee can (and does) pass on his income taxes. He increases the price of his labor. Labor market has supply and demand just like any other market.<<
I guess theoreticaly thats possible, but I rember a bunch of air controlers that tried to do that in the 80's. It didn't work out very well. Also there is the competition of "undocumented" aliens selling very cheap man hours -ask WalMart.
so you are saying we should tax business more????? or less????
I have no idea what point you think you are making here. It is a FACT that rich people pay the MOST personal Income taxes....
It is not desputable.
To say that low income familys and middle class pay for business taxes is also dumb because people also pay busineses, electric bill their phone, their property leases, their sharholder dividends, ect....
rich pople spend more money than poor people BECAUSE THEY HAVE MORE MONEY! that's why they are rich!
Tax the rich. Cut the tax for the rich, they're overburdened.
Cutting taxes for business speeds growth. Class warfare - blah blah blah...
In 2001, the latest year of available data, the top 5 percent of taxpayers paid more than one-half (53.3 percent) of all individual income taxes, but reported roughly one-third (32.0 percent) of income.
The top 1 percent of taxpayers paid 33.9 percent of all individual income taxes in 2001. This group of taxpayers has paid more than 30 percent of individual income taxes since 1995. Moreover, since 1990 this group’s tax share has grown faster than their income share.
Taxpayers who rank in the top 50 percent of taxpayers by income pay virtually all individual income taxes. In all years since 1990, taxpayers in this group have paid over 90 percent of all individual income taxes. In 2000 and 2001, this group paid over 96 percent of the total.
The President’s tax cuts have shifted a larger share of the individual income taxes paid to higher income taxpayers. In 2004, when most of the tax cut provisions are fully in effect (e.g., lower tax rates, the $1,000 child credit, marriage penalty relief), the projected tax share for lower-income taxpayers will fall, while the tax share for higher-income taxpayers will rise.
The share of taxes paid by the bottom 50 percent of taxpayers will fall from 4.1 percent to 3.6 percent.
The share of taxes paid by the top 1 percent of taxpayers will rise from 30.5 percent to 32.3 percent.
The average tax rate for the bottom 50 percent of taxpayers falls by 16 percent as compared to a 12 percent decline for taxpayers in the top 1 percent.
http://www.ustreas.gov/press/releases/js1287.htm