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Why White House, Democrats use $400,000 as threshold to tax the rich


President Joe Biden addresses the 76th Session of the U.N. General Assembly on Sept. 21, 2021 in New York.

Eduardo Munoz-Pool/Getty Images

President Joe Biden and House Democrats have unveiled plans to raise taxes on households with more than $400,000 of annual income, and cut or maintain taxes for those below the line.

But what’s the significance of this tax-policy North Star?

At its core, the policy aims to collect more tax revenue from the wealthiest Americans. Income of at least $400,000 represents roughly the top 1% to 2% of households, according to tax data and policy experts.

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But the reasons for choosing $400,000 as a line demarcating the rich from lower and middle earners aren’t entirely clear, since the number doesn’t precisely match household tax statistics, experts said.

“It is an arbitrary threshold,” according to Leonard Burman, who co-founded the Tax Policy Center, a joint project of the Brookings Institute and the Urban Institute. “There’s no analytical justification for it.”

Spokespeople for the White House and House Ways and Means Committee didn’t return requests for comment.

Top 1% or 2%?

If extrapolating, those with at least $400,000 of income would be closer to the top 2%, according to Garrett Watson, a senior policy analyst at the Tax Foundation.

However, these figures don’t represent all American households; they only include people who filed a tax return.

The data therefore omits millions of non-filers, who are largely low earners, and skew the percentage. (Nearly 27 million people didn’t file a return in 2021, for example, the Tax Policy Center estimates.)

Including this large swath of lower earners in estimates means a $400,000 income most likely falls closer to the top 1% of total U.S. households, Watson said.

A $400,000 pledge

Tax pledges pegged to income levels aren’t new. For example, Democratic presidential contenders like John Kerry and Barack Obama used incomes of $200,000 and $250,000, respectively, for key elements of their tax plans during their campaigns, Watson said.

Biden’s higher $400,000 baseline may reflect growing income and wealth inequality in the U.S., Watson added.

There may also be a geographical justification — the recognition that a $400,000 income, while high according to national standards, may not go as far in some major cities with high costs of living.

“It’s less high in Washington, New York, Los Angeles and San Francisco than it is in all the rest of the country,” Burman said.

Earlier this year,…



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Why White House, Democrats use $400,000 as threshold to tax the rich