The Occupy Wall Street movement distinguishes between the 1% (who have a lot of money) and the 99% (who have less). Just how rich are the 1%? Income tax data for the 2008 tax year, published by the Internal Revenue Service, gives us a perspective.
That spike running up the right-hand edge of the graphic is the average income of tax filers in the 1%.
A quintile is a fifth, 20%. The upper quintile of US tax returns is a set of returns with higher incomes than the other four-fifths of returns. A percentile is a hundredth.
The chart below shows the average incomes by quintiles, with the upper quintile broken into the 19% not-quite-rich and the 1%.
If you lined up 100 people representative of the quintiles and the 1%, and you stacked up their 2008 income in dollar bills, in a nice orderly row, then it would look something like the chart.
The income of the 1% person is bigger than the combined incomes of the 80 people in the lower 4 quintiles. The income of the 1% person is bigger than the combined incomes of half the other people in the 5th quintile.
If you are in the 1%, then your annual income is at least $500,000. The average income for the 1% is a little more than $1.4 million.
If you are in the upper, or fifth, quintile, but not in the 1%, then your annual income is more than $75,000, with an average of $97,000 for this group.
Quintile |
Avg Taxable Inc $000
|
Min Adj Grs Inc $000
|
Aggregate Taxable Inc $bil
|
1% of Aggr $bil
|
1 % |
$1,414
|
$500
|
$1,271
|
$13
|
V ex 1% |
$97
|
$75
|
$2,819
|
$28
|
IV |
$34
|
$40
|
$1,038
|
$10
|
III |
$16
|
$25
|
$368
|
$4
|
II |
$5
|
$10
|
$150
|
$2
|
I |
$0
|
$0
|
$6
|
$0
|
If the government increases everybody's overall income tax rate by 1%, then the 1% will pay $13 billion more, and the other 19% will pay $28 billion more, and the other 80% will pay $16 billion more.
(If you are interested, email me and I'll send you a copy of the detailed calculations using the IRS data.)
(If you are interested, email me and I'll send you a copy of the detailed calculations using the IRS data.)
Sources:
Tables 1 and 2 for 2008, http://www.irs.gov/taxstats/indtaxstats/article/0,,id=96981,00.html (retrieved 13-Nov-2011).
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