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| Source: 401(K) 2012 |
President Obama's recent State of the Union speech consisted of a number of proposals and policy ideas, one of which touched on a point of great contention in this country: tax policy. The left says that the rich don't pay their fair share, and the right argues that the poor get a free ride. Sure, there's more nuance to the political differences--but not much! This conflict makes Obama's proposal to "...extend tax credits to the middle class by hiking taxes on wealthier Americans and big banks..." (The Huffington Post) that much more interesting.
Lost in the vitriol about tax breaks and rates are the facts. That's a shame, because facts happen to be useful when making policy decisions, especially those related to the nation's finances. Fortunately, a fascinating report by the Institute on Taxation and Economy Policy provides just that information. Titled Who Pays: A Distributional Analysis of the Tax Systems in All Fifty States, the report "...assesses the fairness of state and local tax systems by measuring the state and local taxes that will be paid in 2015 by different income groups as a share of their incomes."




