Sammy, first of all, middle class is not $40,000-75,000. If so, above $75,000 would be upper class -- this is nonsense. The rich have more deductions because they have more assets (property on which they pay large amounts of taxes that are deductible). And they get 70% of the capital gains benefits because they own substantially larger amounts of stock. You seem to miss the point and get caught up in percentages instead of looking at amounts of dollars that are paid by the "rich".
Regarding the taxes paid, you are throwing out a lot of numbers that you have found in some sort of Google search. So, let me give you a real life example. I know somebody who made $575,000 last year. They paid $179,175.67 in taxes. This includes $160,000 in income taxes, $11,520 in Medicare, and $7,254 in social security taxes. Add in property taxes and taxes paid on purchases and the amount goes to over $200,000. Add in 3.8% in taxes on stock gains (that apply only to married couples earning $250,000 or singles earning over $200,000 thanks to obamacare) and the amount jumps even more. Add in 38% on stock gains and the amount is now up to north of $225,000.
Get the picture? Don't tell me about people in the so-called upper class not paying taxes. Stop listening to the conventional wisdom as it is portrayed by the media.
This post was edited on 4/17 1:58 PM by njfan47
This post was edited on 4/17 2:01 PM by njfan47