A
new report in the
Wall Street Journal shows that tax cuts for the wealthy do in fact lead to income inequality.
“The evidence does not suggest necessarily a relationship between tax
policy with regard to the top tax rates and the size of the economic
pie, but there may be a relationship to how the economic pie is sliced,”
according to the CRS report, circulated on Friday.
The report appears to give a lift to Democrats’ calls for the
Bush-era tax cuts to lapse next year on incomes above $250,000.
Democrats say that low taxes on the rich merely exacerbate income
inequality. Republicans say that higher taxes on big incomes would hurt
the economy by damping the after-tax income of small-business owners who
pay taxes through their individual returns.
The top individual tax rate for high earners has generally declined
since World War II, and is at 35% currently, down from 94% in 1945, the
report noted. Although capital gains tax rates have been more variable,
the current 15% rate is the lowest in more than 65 years. The capital
gains rate was 25% before 1965.
The government researchers found that “the top tax rates do not
necessarily have a demonstrably significant relationship with
investment.” The researchers also said that the correlation between
economic growth and the top tax rates “is not strong,” and that any
links “could be coincidental or spurious because of changes to the U.S.
economy over the past 65 years.”
This report shows why Congressman John Yarmuth supports "
a fair, responsible tax system that works for everyone and helps ensure a strong middle class."
In Mitt Romney news, he's favoring fundraisers over rallying voters.
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