Quote from Yannis:
No need for gradstanding, I didn't say anything about the effective tax rate you are quoting.
The reason I refer to tax rates per se is because the effective tax rate is hard to compare with regular rates. Why is there a difference? Have they invested their money in stocks and are getting dividends? Have they bought a house and are paying tax free interest on the mortgage? Charitable contributions? Invested in a government sponsored risky eneterprise? There are many good reasons people get breaks in taxation, and most of them have immediate economic (eg, employment) repercussions.
Therefore, quoting something so murky as effective tax rates and calling the tax system regressive is misleading - apples and oranges. No doubt we need tax legislation overhaul, elimination of deductions and flattening of the tax code, I'm all for it. Then we can see who pays what and why. Until then, the thing to work on imo is the nominal tax rate which is a clean number.
In general, I'm very reluctant to belittle those most talented, dedicated and successful among us who are making the whole economy work. Yes, there are cheats, but isn't that common across all strata of society? How about the millions who scam $billions out of entitlements like food stamps and disability? Do they pay any income taxes? Shouldn't they?
Yannis, just wanted to comment on a number of your statements above that are demonstrably incorrect and answer a question or two that you had, where the answer is known.
First "effective tax rates" are not all all "murky". They are known with great accuracy once you have defined "effective tax rate" and the cohort they apply too.
Economists agree on the definition of a progressive tax. It is a tax where the greater one's taxable income the greater the effective tax rate. For a cohort consisting of the top 1% in taxable income the effective tax rate is 15%. It is not at all difficult to define a middle class cohort for which the effective tax rate is a little > 15%. Thus the tax as it relates to these respective cohorts is regressive, not progressive. It is not anything that can be argued about. Facts are facts whether we like them or not.
I don't know what you mean by "regular rates" as the effective tax rate is "regular" by definition. I think what you were asking is "why is the effective rate for the top 1% lower than for a cohort with smaller income?" If that is what you wanted to know, then you have answered your own question; it's because for most in the top 1% much of their income, for some all of it, is unearned income which is taxed at a lower rate by the IRS than is earned income.
Incidentally, I applaud your "reluctance to belittle those most talented, dedicated and successful among us who are making the whole economy work. " Good for you I say! Please recognize that many in the top 1% are "rent seekers" to use economist speak. There is very little productivity associated with rent seeking. You'll find those that you are properly reluctant to belittle mainly in the middle and lower income classes.