MURDER, POLITICS, AND THE END OF THE JAZZ AGE
by Michael Wolraich
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MURDER, POLITICS, AND THE END OF THE JAZZ AGE by Michael Wolraich Order today at Barnes & Noble / Amazon / Books-A-Million / Bookshop |
The marginal tax rate was
91% under Ike starting at $400,000
70% from Nixon to Carter, at $200,000
28% under Reagan at $300,000.
40% under Clinton at $288,000. Which became 35%, under the famous Bush tax cuts.
(remind me why we can't afford social security!)
If you were an AIG trader collecting $6 million in 2004 after taking a risk which might -and did- bankrupt your employer you'd have kept $3,900,000 to comfort you if your social security was inadequate.
Back under Ike you'd have kept less than $600,000. Theoretically that might have made you a bit careful. Only theoretically because no compensation committee would have authorized that bonus in the first place, knowing that 91% would be paid to the IRS. Directors are fond of avowing their patriotism but that doesn't extend to taking money from the bank account and mailing it to Washington.
When Obama and his brain trust were wrestling with the moral hazard of bailing out essentially every car company and bank, the fear was they'd then go back to the same old profligate ways. So some company should be punished pour encourager les autres (that's French for encourager les autres).
But maybe wiping out the shareholders and firing the workers seemed sort of an indirect way of offsetting compensation so excessive it makes it worth taking a bet-your-company risk because if you collect (thank you Tim Geithner) you're outta there.
We're met the enemy and it is the low progressivity of our tax rates.
Comments
Do you have a good source for those numbers? I'm not doubting them, it's just nice to have a source. My Republican father and I often have (amicable) discussions about taxes, and the more facts, the better.
by Verified Atheist on Wed, 10/05/2011 - 12:47pm
I googled marginal tax rates and selected History of Federal Individual Income Bottom and Top Brackets. It was supplied by the National Taxpayers Union. It was in a table starting with 1913and continuing to 2011. with 12 footnotes .
by Flavius on Wed, 10/05/2011 - 5:41pm
Here's the link, VA, to historic tax tables. It's at taxfoundation.org.
Note that the numbers Flavius quotes are in nominal dollars. The PDF linked includes tables for both nominal and adjusted-for-inflation dollars.
More interesting than just a comparison of the top tax bracket, to me, is the entire spectrum of tax rates. Take a look, for example, at the rates for 1952, adjusted for inflation:
by Red Planet on Fri, 10/07/2011 - 12:41pm