tax policy center
publications
HOME | TAX TOPICS | NUMBERS | TAX FACTS | LIBRARY | BRIEFING BOOK | EVENTS | LEGISLATION | PRESS | TAXVOX Blog | About Us help get RSS feed

Advanced Search

by Topic:

by Author:

by Type:

by Date Range:
  From last wks

     

library

The Opacity of Marginal Tax Rates

Rosanne Altshuler, Jacob Goldin

Published: October 21, 2009
Availability:
 PDF |  Printer-Friendly Version

Share:  Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Share on LinkedIn Share on Yahoo Buzz Share on Digg Share on Reddit

Reprinted with permission of Tax Analysts.

The text below is an excerpt from the complete document. Read the full report in PDF format.


Abstract

Suppose that a taxpayer earns an additional dollar of income. How much tax would she owe on that dollar? A natural way to answer this question would be to look up the taxpayer's statutory tax rate - the tax rate corresponding to her tax bracket and filing status.


Introduction

But that approach would yield the wrong answer for half of all taxpayers in 2009. The actual tax rate on an extra dollar of earnings - the effective marginal tax rate (EMTR) - is higher than the statutory marginal tax rate (SMTR) for 32 percent of taxpayers and lower than the SMTR for almost 18 percent of taxpayers. The discrepancy is especially striking for taxpayers subject to the alternative minimum tax - more than 80 percent face an EMTR above their SMTR. Moreover, the two rates can differ a lot.

(End of excerpt. The entire report is available in PDF format.)