A Look at the Tax Returns of the Top 400 Taxpayers
The top 400 U.S. individual taxpayers got 1.59% of the nation?s household returns in 2007, according to their tax returns, three era the slice they got in the 1990s, according to the Internal Revenue Service. They paid 2.05% of all individual returns taxes in that year.
In its once a year update of the taxes paid by the 400 best-off taxpayers, who aren?t identified, the IRS also said that only 220 of the top 400 were in the top marginal tax bracket. The 400 best-off taxpayers paid an average tax rate of 16.6%, lower than in any year since the IRS started making the intelligence in 1992.
To make the top 400, a taxpayer had to have returns of more than $138.8 million. As a group, the top 400 reported $137.9 billion in returns, and paid $22.9 billion in federal returns taxes.
About 81.3% of the returns of the top 400 households came in the form of capital gains, dividends or interest, the IRS data show. Only 6.5% came in the form of salaries and wages.
Over the past 16 tax years 3,472 uncommon taxpayers showed up in the top 400 at smallest amount once. Of these taxpayers, a small
more than 27% grow more than once. In any agreed year, about 40% percent of the top-400 returns were filed by taxpayers who weren?t in that special club in any of the 15 years .
In all, the IRS received nearly 143 million individual tax returns for 2007, the year that finished with the onset of the worst recession in decades.