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Taxes

'The Rich Don't Pay Their Fair Share' and 4 Other Tax Myths That Won't Die

The United States has the most progressive income-tax system in the developed world.

Veronique de Rugy | 4.16.2026 10:50 AM

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A man stares up at tax documents | Illustration: Internal Revenue Service/Midjourney
(Illustration: Internal Revenue Service/Midjourney)

Every April, Americans spend more than 7 billion hours filing taxes and roughly the same amount of time arguing over them, almost entirely on the basis of several common myths. Here are the five most consequential.

Myth No. 1: The Rich Don't Pay Their Fair Share

This is the most repeated claim in American tax politics and one of the least supported by actual data. The top 1 percent of earners take in 22 percent of total income and pay 40 percent of all federal income taxes. The top 10 percent earn about half the nation's income and pay 72 percent of its taxes. The bottom half of earners, collectively, pay roughly 3 percent of the tax revenue. The United States, in fact, has the most progressive income-tax system in the developed world.

Myth No. 2: We'll Fix the Budget Deficit by Taxing the Rich

We simply cannot. The collective net worth of every American billionaire is estimated at somewhere around $8 trillion. The projected federal deficit over the next decade alone approaches $25 trillion. Even a one-time total confiscation of every billionaire's wealth wouldn't come close, and you only get to do it once.

The real driver of America's fiscal crisis isn't a shortage of tax revenue from the wealthy. It's the structural growth of Social Security and Medicare. The Congressional Budget Office projects that such mandatory spending and interest payments will permanently exceed all federal revenue starting next year. No amount you could tax the rich will correct an imbalance like this.

Myth No. 3: If You Can't Tax the Rich, Tax Corporations

Corporations are the next most likely target for those who want large government without the middle class paying for it. The problem is that corporations don't actually pay taxes. Once you understand why, this starts to look like one of the worst ideas in America's tax code.

Corporations write checks to the IRS, but they don't bear the tax burden. Every dollar collected for corporate tax comes from a human: the worker who's paid a lower wage, the shareholder who earns less, and the consumer who pays higher prices at checkout. Research shows that workers bear somewhere between one-third and two-thirds of the corporate tax burden through lower wages. If you have a 401(k), you're paying it too, quietly, through lower returns on every stock in the fund.

Further, corporate profits are returns on investment. Tax them and you get less investment. Less investment means lower productivity, which leads to lower wages over time. Decades ago, economists Robert Hall and Alvin Rabushka showed a better way: Replace the corporate income tax with a consumption-based system under which businesses deduct all wages and capital investment immediately. No double taxation, no penalty on investment, and revenue without unintended economic damage.

The corporate tax survives because voters mistakenly believe someone else pays it. This belief is expensive.

Myth No. 4: Capital Gains Should Be Taxed Like Ordinary Income

This proposal sounds like common sense, but it's bad economics. When a company earns a dollar of profit, it pays roughly 26 cents in combined federal and state corporate taxes before distributing the rest to its shareholders. When it's all said and done, the government has taken close to half of every dollar the company earned. That's not a tax on the rich—it's two taxes on the same income.

Those who want to raise capital-gains rates assume the U.S. is a low-tax haven for investors. It's not. America's combined federal, state, and net investment income tax rate on capital gains already sits at 29.2 percent, well above the average of 19.1 percent in fellow Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) democracies. We're already an outlier, and not in a good direction.

Myth No. 5: Tax Cuts Pay for Themselves

Politicians on the right have said this for 40 years. But it's not quite true. Tax rates affect behavior. Cut the marginal rate on work and investment, and you get more of both, which generates more revenue than a static calculation predicts. But generating more revenue than expected is not necessarily enough to cover the cost of the rate cut. The 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act proved it. Growth picked up, wages rose, business investment increased, yet the deficit still widened.

The honest argument is different: A tax cut that costs real revenue but improves the allocation of capital and raises long-run productivity is still the right policy. The question is not whether tax cuts pay for themselves but whether the economic growth is worthwhile. That's harder to fit on a bumper sticker, but it's the version of the conservative tax argument that actually holds up.

That said, we should always offset the loss of revenue when possible. There is plenty of spending to cut, and there are plenty of tax breaks to close for that.

COPYRIGHT 2026 CREATORS.COM

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NEXT: ‘Blue Power’ and the Rise of Police Union Politics

Veronique de Rugy is a contributing editor at Reason. She is a senior research fellow at the Mercatus Center at George Mason University.

TaxesProgressive TaxationIncome taxTaxpayersWealthBudget DeficitGovernment SpendingCorporationsCapital GainsEconomic GrowthWagesInvestment
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  1. Leo Kovalensky II   3 hours ago

    If only politics followed reason and logic.

    Politics is all about division and the complicated US tax code definitely supports that goal. If we have to pay an income tax it should be flat. Remove all deductions and lower the overall rates. Anything other than that is nothing more than a political football with Dems and Repubs moving the line of scrimmage a few yards in either direction to appease their bases.

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  2. robbbb   2 hours ago

    Myth #1 is not a myth. It is not true or false. It is an opinion.

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    1. Mickey Rat   2 hours ago

      And if you never define what "fair share" means, it is an unfalsifiable opinion that is just empty rhetoric and propaganda.

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  3. MWAocdoc   2 hours ago

    All of these myths apply to all taxes. Every dollar that government diverts from a "productive" activity to a non-productive activity results in the same downside, although an argument can be made that double taxation and uneven distribution is worse than a single tax. Philosophically since ALL taxes are eventually borne by the citizens, it makes sense that only income taxes should be used to fund the necessary functions of government. Government should not spend ANY money that does not go to the minimum necessary functions of government and should not spend ANY money above and beyond a stable revenue stream except temporarily during a real emergency, with correction as soon as possible afterwards.

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  4. Bubba Jones   2 hours ago

    You can't ignore the total tax burden of the bottom 50% of earners. Sales tax, property tax and FICA take a bigger share of their income than it does for the top 10%.

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    1. damikesc   2 hours ago

      And? The top 50% pay an insanely large percentage of the taxes period. If we're seeking FAIR, they should pay half and no more.

      Log in to Reply
      1. Bubba Jones   2 hours ago

        data not shown

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        1. JesseAz (RIP CK)   2 hours ago

          Here you go retard.

          The lowest quintile of Americans receives a net of 127 percent of their market income through the tax and transfer system, accounting for both the taxes they pay and the transfers they receive. At the other end of the spectrum, the top quintile gives up 31 percent of their market income due to taxes and transfers.

          https://taxfoundation.org/research/all/federal/who-pays-taxes-federal-state-local-tax-burden-transfers/

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    2. JesseAz (RIP CK)   2 hours ago

      Hey bubba... you know you can take a look at effective tax rates by quintile instead of repeating this dumb talking point over and over right?

      Log in to Reply
  5. BYODB   2 hours ago

    It's pretty easy, most American's think at least one tax bracket above themselves is what 'wealthy' really is, and think those people should be the one's to shoulder the American tax burden. It's always someone else.

    It's telling that a whole bunch of Americans are eternally shocked that, after asking the government to raise taxes on 'the rich', it turns out they are the wealthy one's that get taxed more.

    Remember when Warren Buffet said he should pay more in taxes while literally sheltering a lot of his wealth specifically to bring down his tax burden? Actions speak a lot louder than words, so one assumes he really meant some other rich asshole should be the one paying; not him specifically.

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  6. Liberty_Belle   2 hours ago

    Corporations are the next most likely target for those who want large government without the middle class paying for it.

    What middle class ?

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    1. damikesc   2 hours ago

      Yes, Democrats have been working hard for years to kill the middle class.

      Make all of us beggars because beggars are easier to please.

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    2. Leo Kovalensky II   43 minutes ago

      What middle class ?

      The shrinking middle class as a problem is another myth that belongs on the list. The middle class is not only wealthier than it was in 1971, but most mobility out of the middle class has been upwards, not downwards.
      https://www.pewresearch.org/race-and-ethnicity/2024/05/31/the-state-of-the-american-middle-class/

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  7. IceTrey   2 hours ago

    Coercive taxation is an immoral violation of our natural right as sapient beings to liberty. Government initiating force against the people is tyranny.

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    1. Bubba Jones   2 hours ago

      Yes, you have a natural right to be pillaged by the neighbor with more effective collective action.

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