The Congressional Budget Office (CBO) is out with a report today on the distribution of federal taxes and it shows how low-income Americans were hurt by last year's
In 2010, the top 1% paid the highest average rate in 2010 at 29.4% and the top quintile paid at a rate of 24%. On the other side, the bottom 20% paid just a 1.5% of their income in federal taxes.
None of this is surprising. This is how a progressive
Here's the important table:
CBO
Look which group had the largest increase in their average tax rate? The lowest 20% of earners.
The top one percent took the biggest hit because the top marginal tax rate returned to 39.6% from 35% and new taxes from the Affordable Care Act kicked in. The top percentile's average rate increased a whopping 4.2 percentage points
But the remaining high income earners (the 91st to 99th percentiles) saw their average tax rate barely change at all. Instead, it was the bottom quintile of Americans who saw their average tax rate rise by 1.6 percentage points. That's more than the increase in the average tax rate of the top quintile even including the huge tax hike on the top one percent.
This is largely the result of the expiration of the