| I don't know how it works in the US but in the EU the working class pay a lot more tax, proportionally, than the rich: In Spain if you work and you cost your company 26430 euros: - The company pays 6430 for social security (calculated as a % of your salary, so this is effectively your tax even if on paper it's the company that pays it.) - You pay 1270 for social security (on paper you pay it but the company gives it to the tax office directly) - You pay 2338 for income tax (on paper you pay it but the company gives most of it to the tax office directly) - You end up getting 16390 euros, or an effective tax rate of 38%. This goes up if you pick a higher salary, obviously. If you work and you cost your company 67000 euros: - The company pays 16300 for social security - You pay 3101 for social security - You pay 11582 - You end up getting 36016 euros, or an effective tax rate of 46%. If you're a freelancer and you work for yourself it's more or less the same but there's also a fixed tax that while not being very high it's hard to deal with when you're earning 0 when starting out. In practice most people just risk it and don't report their activity at first for this reason. But if you're truly rich, you don't work, you have assets that appreciate for you. Tax rate for capital gains is capped at 26% no matter how many millions you're earning. This does not take into account that as a rich person you're going to be spending less of the money you earn than a poor person so you're paying less VAT (sales tax) as well. |
A contribution towards your pension is not a tax. It's a deferred payment. You will get that money later, with interest.
> Tax rate for capital gains is capped at 26% no matter how many millions you're earning.
Capital gains taxes charge you for the nominal increase in the value of the assets you sell, which means that you pay taxes for inflation. For example, if you bought an asset for 100EUR and sell it one year later for 103EUR, you will pay a capital gains tax on that 3EUR difference, even though you may not have actually obtained any benefit if inflation was 3% that year, so you are actually worse off than you were.
> But if you're truly rich, you don't work, you have assets that appreciate for you
You will pay taxes if they appreciate, but you won't get your money back when they depreciate. You are taking a risk.
> This does not take into account that as a rich person you're going to be spending less of the money you earn than a poor person so you're paying less VAT (sales tax) as well
If two people buy the same asset for the same price, they both pay the same amount in VAT. If the rich person ends up buying more stuff, they pay more VAT than the poor person.
And at the end of the day, most of the income taxes obtained by the government are paid by the upper quintile of the population. Which is to say, the working class enjoys social services they can't afford thanks to a small percentage of the population that pays on their behalf.
Not only that, Spain is one of the few countries in the world with a wealth tax, which starts once you reach 700k EUR, so it's not exactly taxing billionaires, either.