cover image: A blueprint for a coordinated minimum effective taxation standard for

A blueprint for a coordinated minimum effective taxation standard for

4 Jul 2024

The decline in effective tax rates at the top of the income distribution A gap in official economic statistics globally is the lack of information about the effective tax rates of ultra-high-net-worth individuals. [...] For instance, in France, the working class (which can be defined as individuals in the bottom 50% of the income distribution), the middle-class (the next 40%), the upper-middle class (the next 9%) and even most of the top 1% have effective tax rates close to the macroeconomic tax rate of 52%. [...] One of its goals is to offset the regressivity of indirect taxes, such as the VAT, which absorb a higher fraction of income at the bottom of the income distribution than at the top. [...] The regressivity starts around the 95th percentile of the pre-tax income distribution in the Netherlands, the 99.9th percentile in France, and the 99.99th percentile in the United States. [...] I first estimate the effective income tax rate of centi-millionaires as a fraction of their pre-tax income by taking the average effective income tax rate of the P99.99-P99.999 and P99.999- P99.9999 groups in Europe and in the United States (where Europe is the arithmetic average of France and the Netherlands) using the data reported in Figure 2.

Authors

Quentin Parrinello

Related Organizations

Pages
49
Published in
France

Table of Contents