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WARREN A. STEPHENS: A real 'inconvenient truth' (about taxes)

I rarely write for my company's newspapers and had no intention of doing so during this year's presidential campaign, but after watching last week's debate I was compelled to put some facts into print so our readers can make an informed decision in this election.

Given the dearth of facts in the current debate, this may not be my only foray into writing for publication.


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I want to make sure I make the proper disclosures about who I support in this presidential campaign. I am the finance co-chair for Arkansas for the John McCain campaign and an ardent free-market capitalist. I believe social issues are best left to individuals, and while I have strong beliefs about them, I will not interject them into my choice of a candidate.

Economics and taxes, on the other hand, are not subject to interpretation. Supply and demand curves are real and they work. This column is an attempt to put facts in front of you, particularly as they relate to taxes and the "fairness" of our tax code.

Sen. Barack Obama is proposing tax increases for small businesses and the top 5 percent of taxpaying Americans. He says that he will give 95 percent of Americans a tax cut. He and Sen. Joe Biden say it is fair and the "patriotic duty" of the top 5 percent to pay more.

Again, full disclosure, I am in the top 5 percent, and probably the top 1 percent.

But the facts as to who pays taxes paint a different picture and, for whatever reason, Sen. McCain will not use them. The tables accompanying this column (below) really say it all.

These statistics are from the U.S. Treasury Department, and they reveal a startling and seldom talked about fact. In 2005, the top 1 percent of wage earners in this country paid 39 percent of the income taxes collected, while the top 5 percent paid 60 percent. That's right, 60 percent of all income taxes were paid by the same people on whom Sens. Obama and Biden want to raise taxes. What is more, the percentage paid by this group has increased since the so-called Bush tax cuts took effect. This is a real inconvenient truth for the Obama campaign.

In 2006, the lower 50 percent of wage earners had 12.5 percent of the income and paid 3 percent of federal income taxes. The 2006 statistics also reveal that the top 5 percent of U.S. taxpayers paid $616 billion in federal income taxes, which was more than the $408.1 billion paid by the remaining 95 percent of taxpayers. Our system could hardly be weighted to make the wealthy pay even more, yet that is precisely what Sen. Obama proposes.

I will reluctantly accept (for now) that in our society the top wage earners will pay more (as a percentage) in taxes, but if Sen. Obama wants to raise taxes, he should say so. As The Wall Street Journal has been reporting, you cannot give a tax cut to people who do not pay taxes. Sen. Obama's plan is a redistribution of income from those who pay taxes to those who do not. It is nothing more than the granddaddy of all welfare plans, and voters need to know that.

For Sens. Obama and Biden to couch this issue as one of fairness and a "patriotic duty" is an attempt to deceive the American public as to the facts.

I am not afraid of Sen. Obama becoming president because I believe him to be a bad person. Rather, I am concerned about his policies and their effect on our economy, both in the short and long term. Higher tax rates will discourage investment and capital formation, and that is not good for anyone.

Warren A. Stephens (warren@reviewjournal.com) is president and chief executive officer of Stephens Inc., one of the largest investment companies off Wall Street and an owner of Stephens Media, which publishes the Review-Journal and newspapers in nine states.

TAXES AND INCOME

TOP 1% SHARE OF TOTAL:
  INCOME TAXES PAID
1990 14% 25%
2000 21% 37%
2005 21% 39%

TOP 5% SHARE OF TOTAL:
  INCOME TAXES PAID
1990 27% 44%
2000 35% 56%
2005 36% 60%
Source: Treasury Department, Oct. 2007
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Lou from Littleton wrote on September 08, 2009 05:59 AM: So, how many of you that voted for Mr. Obama thinking you would get a new silver platter of free goods and can now see that while his right hand is handing you money, his left is in your back pocket taking it right back, with taxes on it? maybe he will fix the budget by growing a third arm to take more of your money? If you really wanted change sure got it, too bad he never said it was for the better.
http://media.ebaumsworld.com/mediaFiles/picture/342756/80713721.jpg


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Paying more taxes wrote on September 08, 2009 05:50 AM: So, not even 7 months past the election and we see how this is working. Not only is the upper 5% paying more, but so are all the middle and lower tax brackets. We have new taxes on soda, cigarettes, fuel, and anything else that normal people buy. The mighty O has pue us in a whole new league of debt and the free market is all but gone. What a shame America, what a shame.


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Buddy wrote on October 25, 2008 12:14 PM: Mr. Stephens,

Two things about your little diatribe here. First, the top 5% earners in this nation are raking in 95% of the wealth...so, using YOUR math, YOUR tax bracket owes America another 35%!!!!!

Secondly, all the HUGE tax breaks Reagan and Dubya have awarded your tax bracket have NOT generated much vaunted jobs that are the mythical result of trickle down economics. In point of fact, YOU are one of the absolute WORST offenders in this category. Your company goes into cities, buys ALL the print media and closes all but one paper! YOU, sir, have destroyed thousands upon thousands of jobs in your avarice and greed. AND you leave communities without a balanced media and saddle them your twisted rightwingnut rags.


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Laura Lee Angus wrote on October 16, 2008 03:13 PM: Are you and Joe the Plumber first cousins? Both of you have it right!!!


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karl rocha wrote on October 16, 2008 10:22 AM: Mr. Stephens,
Unfairness? Frankly, you sound like you're twelve years old kicking dirt on a baseball diamond. Taxes are subject to supply and demand curves like anything else, and those curves do work according to your own admission in your article 'A real 'inconvenient truth' about taxes'. The rich should be taxed just short of hurting the economy and it's the same with the middle class - taxed just short of hurting the economy. The fact that the wealthy pay a disproportionate percentage is irrelevant. After all, you don't charge me for the Review-Journal based of "fairness" but on what I'm willing to pay. Our "welfare" state benefits everyone (especially you - the top 1 percent of taxpaying Americans). You would see that if you audited your good fortune and attributed how much of it was possible due to laws and benefits of government: the paper made from trees harvested from federal lands that make up your newspaper, to the subsidized roads and fuel that allow for a delivery system, and it's also the reason why you don't have squatters in your living room right now. You use the most, you pay the most and you get compensated the most. It's time to grow up.


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Dear yawn, Your username explains it all wrote on October 15, 2008 07:12 PM: Its people like "yawn" asleep at the wheel, that are driving us into a ditch.

McCain is unlike every other Republican. That's why so many of us Republicans don't like. And yet, today, that's why we like him. He's going to take down Barney Frank, Franklin Reigns and already called for the resignation of SEC Chairman Cox.

OBAMA IS NOT GOING TO TAKE ON CORRUPTION. Because he's one of them.


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yawn wrote on October 15, 2008 05:59 PM: Yawn,
You can go to bed now! Stay home on Nov. 4th


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Charles J. Lingo wrote on October 15, 2008 05:59 PM: Dear Mr. Stephens,

Thank you.

My concern is that those who should read this, won't. And that those whose votes have been purchased with promises of more free money from a "refundable tax credit" which is nothing but a disguised welfare payment, will stay purchased.

What I see as missing from this discussion is that buying votes with welfare, whether disguised or not is directly counterproductive to increased employment. If the government will pay you to sit home, why look for a job, or take one if it is offered.

I doubt that I shall ever see it enacted into law, but I should like to see two years of self support added as a requirement for voter eligibility. I believe that this plus registration, in person only, at official registration offices with registration ended 30 days before the ballot is cast could go a long way to stopping voter fraud.

My letter to you at the email address in the RJ was returned as undeliverable.


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James wrote on October 15, 2008 05:52 PM: Yawn.

Stephens is a Republican who owns the R-J (Republican Journal.)...yawn.
He is a McCain campaign manager in Arkansas...yawn.
He says we should vote for McCain...yawn.

I don't get it. McCain is Bush, the Sequel. And America doesn't want to see anymore of that horror movie.

Get a life Warren...yawn.


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cheech wrote on October 15, 2008 05:21 PM: When Barney Frank is talking about Freddie and Fannie I can't tell if he is taliking about mortgage companies or his plans for the weekend.


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