Posted by mchalesarmy on 6/12/2014 1:22:00 AM (view original):
Posted by toddcommish on 6/12/2014 1:13:00 AM (view original):
So, if I work hard and earn, say, $150,000, I have to give up $45,000 (60% of $75K), so on my marginal income increase of $75K, I only keep $30K.
So, I earn twice as much, but only show 40% additional income.
And that's incentive for doubling my output? If you hypertax marginal income, each additional dollar of gross income realizes less marginal discretionary income. Put in hourly terms I would make roughly $37.50 an hour for the first six months, and $15.00 an hour for the rest of the year, putting my earning power just a little more than minimum wage.
That was just using the numbers made up by tec.
No one is actually arguing for that.
The tax rate of 70% would be for money earned over a number like 1M or something along those lines.
In fact, when the tax rate first jumped to 63% in 1932 the top bracket was for those earning 1M+ which in today's dollars is 17.3M+.
Then in '36 the highest bracket was for 5M+ (85+M today).
In '42 the highest bracket dropped all the way down to 200K+ (2.9M today).
It stayed roughly in this ballpark until the Reagan tax cut in 1982 when the top bracket became $60,600 (148K in today's $).
Bush 1 dropped the rate even further to 28% and the top bracket was set at 23,900K + (which is roughly 48K today).
I have advocated for creating more brackets at the top and increasing those rates fractionally all the way to a high of at least 50% on every dollar over $100M. Nowhere near the 70%+ that we had for almost 50 years, but by doing this you could not only reduce the tax burden on the lower wage earners enough that they would stimulate the economy, but that stimulus to the economy would also benefit a good portion of the top 20% who have more customers buying their goods and services.
There really isn't a downside to at least trying it for a few years.