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This article is related to health care costs as new sources of revenue will be needed to help balance the federal budget. There simply are not enough reasonable cuts in spending to close the deficit gap. Tax increases will be necessary and this analysis examines effects of past tax policies.
SUMMARY
After years of neglect, political America has awoken to the problems of rising deficits being incurred at all levels of government. Economists and politicians may argue endlessly of causes and solutions. Cut spending, raise taxes, grow the economy all have their place. This essay examines income, wealth, and taxes, not just rates but where those rates have affected income growth.
By every measure, U.S. wealth and income has skewed heavily and continues to tilt to the top 1%, approaching an unhealthy situation. A robust middle class will spend more of its earnings than the wealthy and in this country consumer spending constitutes the largest economic component.
METHODOLOGY
All the data used in this report are derived from government sources. Income and tax data are from Congressional Budget Office (CBO). CBO published tax and income data from 1979 through 2007, dividing data of households into five quintiles (20% each) as well as the top 10%, 5%, and 1%. Wealth data come from the Federal Reserve’s 2007 Survey of Consumer Finances Chartbook divided into four quartiles plus top 10%.
GO TO DISCUSSION – Household Income
GO TO DISCUSSION – Household Wealth
CONCLUSION
The wealthy always had the lion’s share of income and assets. At some point, however, excessive accumulation of wealth can tend to stymie economic growth. A robust middle class will spend more of its earnings than the wealthy and in the US economy, consumer spending constitutes the largest economic component.
Download PDF Report >>> Income-Wealth
Filed under: Analyses, Congressional Budget Office (CBO), Federal Reserve, Health Costs, Wealth and Income | Tagged: business equity, CBO, corporate tax, excise tax, Federal Reserve, financial assets, household income, household wealth, income tax, social security tax, tax rates |
We really need to do something about the inequities of our health systems.