🔍
Who pays the lowest taxes in the US? - YouTube
Channel: Vox
[5]
This person on the left — she represents
the poorest 10 percent of Americans.
[9]
And on the right — he is the very richest
10 percent.
[13]
So let’s ask this group a simple question:
[15]
What percentage of your income gets taxed?
[18]
Most Americans pay multiple income taxes … to
the federal government, and state governments,
[22]
and local governments.
[24]
But a recent analysis by two economists added
up all the income taxes.
[28]
And when you do that, the data shows that
poor people pay a very small part of their
[32]
income to the government.
[33]
And rich people pay more.
[36]
This concept, of taxing the poor at a lower
rate — and taxing the rich more… this
[39]
is called: progressive taxation.
[41]
It’s how taxes work in most countries.
[43]
But it’s also why some critics question
whether these people…
[46]
… are getting away without paying their
fair share:
[48]
"The middle class and the poor that pay, if
anything, a lot less."
[53]
"Why is it that 45 percent of the population
of this country is not contributing back to the rest?"
[59]
But now let’s add one more guy to this group of 10:
[62]
This guy — he represents the 400 richest Americans.
[65]
Billionaires.
[67]
Billionaires don’t make most of their money
through typical income.
[70]
So their income actually gets taxed at lower
rates than these less rich people.
[74]
Now, you might be thinking, don’t billionaires
pay taxes in other ways?
[78]
And the answer is yes.
[79]
This is just the income tax, and there are
lots of other kinds of taxes in America.
[84]
And this analysis, where this data came from?
[86]
It looked at all of those taxes.
[88]
And it shows that, when we add them all up...
[91]
There actually is someone in this group who
might not be paying their fair share.
[99]
Let's go back to our first chart, with these
11 people.
[103]
Remember, this is just the income tax.
[106]
What happens when we add in all the other
taxes?
[108]
Well, let’s look at another kind of tax:
Corporate and property taxes.
[111]
These are the taxes we pay on the things we
own:
[114]
Usually businesses, and property,
[115]
and the money we make on them...
[117]
Usually, rich people own more things.
[120]
So these corporate and property taxes hit
them the hardest.
[124]
Rich people also tend to be from rich families.
[126]
And when they inherit a lot of money, the
government taxes them.
[130]
This is called an estate tax.
[132]
Put these taxes together, and it’s clear
that they place a much heavier burden on the
[135]
rich -- including billionaires.
[138]
Add these back onto the income taxes,
[140]
and it looks like the rich really do pay way more than the poor.
[145]
But now let's talk about another tax.
[147]
This one's buried in your paystub.
[149]
Look closely, and you'll see something called
a Medicare tax and a Social Security tax.
[153]
Sometimes paystubs call them FICA.
[155]
Anyway, combined, these are called payroll
taxes.
[158]
Medicare and Social Security are two really
important programs: they provide health care
[162]
and a modest income for when we get old and
retire.
[165]
But they’re also expensive.
[166]
Which is why we have these payroll taxes -- separate from the income tax --
[169]
to pay for them.
[170]
So on your paycheck, you'll notice that you're
taxed 7.65 percent in payroll taxes.
[175]
And your company is supposed to pay another
7.65 percent on your behalf.
[179]
But economists have found that, in practice,
the way companies pay their part of the payroll tax...
[183]
is by just paying workers less.
[186]
So in reality, many workers pay nearly the full 15.3
percent toward this tax.
[191]
And everyone is on the hook for the same percentage.
[195]
But the wealthy?
[197]
Once someone earns more than about $130,000
a year … the money they make beyond that
[202]
isn't subject to the Social Security tax.
[204]
It's capped.
[206]
That means the rich pay a really small portion
of their income toward payroll taxes.
[211]
And poor people and the middle class pay way
more.
[214]
Add payroll taxes onto the chart, and it starts
to flatten out.
[220]
The last type of taxes we’re going to look
at are the taxes we pay when we buy stuff.
[225]
For example, let's say you're looking to buy
a t-shirt.
[227]
When you check out, you pay a sales tax, which
is a percentage of its cost.
[231]
And sales taxes apply to most things:
[233]
Furniture. Toilet paper. Laundry detergent.
[237]
For some items, like beer and gasoline, there
are additional taxes that get incorporated
[241]
into the price tag ... before you even get
to the store.
[245]
These are called consumption taxes.
[247]
And we all pay the same rate on the things
we buy, regardless of how rich we are.
[251]
You might think that, since rich people usually
buy more things — and more expensive things…
[256]
they pay a larger percentage of their income
toward these taxes.
[259]
But, relative to how much money they have,
the stuff they buy, and the taxes they
[263]
pay on that stuff, take up a relatively small
portion of their income.
[267]
Meanwhile, everyone, even people with almost no money,
[270]
needs to buy certain basic things to survive.
[272]
And for poor people, those basic things and the taxes that come with them
[276]
cost them almost everything they earn.
[279]
So if we chart how much of their income each
of these people pays in consumption taxes...
[283]
… we can see that poor people pay a much larger
portion.
[289]
When we put these taxes together…
[292]
Suddenly we see a big change.
[296]
The chart shows us that this line, from before,
is a lie.
[301]
That America’s tax system as a whole, isn’t
very progressive.
[305]
Instead, it’s mostly flat.
[307]
Poor people pay about the same portion of
their income in taxes as rich people.
[311]
And this guy — this billionaire — is paying
a smaller portion than everyone else.
[316]
Even the poorest.
[318]
If you look at just certain types of taxes,
[321]
it’s natural to assume that rich people pay a bigger tax burden in the US,
[325]
and that poor people aren’t exactly paying their fair share.
[328]
But a more complete look at the bigger picture,
challenges that.
[332]
And it suggests that, if we’re looking for
a group that isn’t paying their fair share,
[336]
we might be looking on the wrong end.
Most Recent Videos:
You can go back to the homepage right here: Homepage





