Post
by Speaker to Animals » Thu Mar 29, 2018 10:29 am
If you realize that Congress plays accounting gimmicks with different tax brackets and exemptions, youd realize we have not seen the point you described since we dropped the tax rate after the second world war.
We are nowhere near the point where an increase in tax rates would result in a lower tax revenue. Get real, man.
It is easier for Congress to tax the middle class than the wealthy. They will pass "tax cuts" that involve things like permanent reductions on capital gains (which helps the wealthy) and then temporary reductions on income taxes for the middle class. But they couple the latter with removal of various exemptions so it ends up being neutral or a tax increase on the middle class. Tax revenue goes up because they removed exemptions and essentially increased taxes on the middle class.
It is not as simple as saying "look! we lowered taxes and revenues went up y'all!"
If we imagine a nation that has a flat tax rate, and all we did was lower that rate without playing accounting games with various exemptions and credits, the only way you can see an increase in revenue is when you are past that point of diminishing returns as exhibited by the graph Fife posted. We are nowhere near that point and we have such a complex taxation system that you cannot even talk about "lowering taxes" in the abstract without qualifying exactly which taxes are lowered, for which brackets, and what exemptions, credits, and subsidies were altered.
This neocon trickle down economics bullshit is a brain cancer, man.