New research argues the ultra-rich paid a lower overall tax rate for the first time ever last year than the other income groups. “There are a lot of advantages to being rich, and this is one of them,” said Mark Mazur, director of the Urban-Brookings Tax Policy Center. The more money you make, he said, the more money you have to pay someone to find ways to legally avoid paying tax.
University of California, Berkeley economists said the 400 richest Americans paid a combined state, local and federal tax rate this year of 23%, lower than the combined 24% tax rate for the bottom half of households. The claim has its skeptics[1], but some economists say the Trump administration’s revamp of the tax code helped wealthy Americans. They also have other theories.
The wealthy also have a slew of savvy professionals to help them navigate a complicated tax system, according to Internal Revenue Service statistics[2]. [3]Nearly 69% of taxpayers earning between $200,000 and $500,000 a year used a professional tax preparer versus 85% of those earnings between $500,000 and $1 million, and 92% of people earning at least $1 million.
That compares to a national average of 53.4%. While many less wealthy Americans may not have such complicated accounts, they also miss out on the myriad ways of legally avoiding paying taxes, experts say. Paid preparers — like accountants and tax attorneys — submitted 80 million of the almost 150 million tax returns in 2016, the most recent data on the matter. ...
