US inequality persists across administrations, analysis finds

US inequality persists across administrations, analysis finds

8 reported

A new analysis of US income inequality, based on data from the Congressional Budget Office and other sources, finds that the gap between the richest and poorest Americans has persisted across Democratic and Republican administrations. The article, written by journalist Eduardo Porter, notes that while the Obama administration made the largest investments in reducing inequality since the Great Society, those efforts appear as minor blips in a long history of American indifference toward disparities. By the end of 2016, taxes and transfers cut the share of income going to the richest 1% by just over a fifth, more than under any government since Jimmy Carter. However, under Donald Trump, the share of income for the richest 1% drifted back up to 13.2% by the end of his first term, and his 2025 One Big Beautiful Bill Act reduced the annual income of the poorest tenth of households by 3.1% while boosting the top decile by 2.6%. The article emphasizes that the United States’ deep inequality is not solely Trump’s fault, but a feature of American society embedded in a dislike of paying taxes, particularly among the wealthy. It also notes that the 400 richest Americans pay a smaller share of their income in taxes than the average citizen, and that unrealized capital gains account for 55% of the largest estates, which are bequeathed tax-free.

What’s reported

Under Obama, taxes and transfers cut the share of income going to the richest 1% by just over a fifth by end of 2016, more than under any government since Jimmy Carter.
They raised the slice of income going to the poorest fifth from 3.9% to 7.9%, the highest share since at least 1979.
Under Trump, the share of income for the richest 1% after taxes and transfers drifted back up to 13.2% from 12.5% the year Obama left office.
The $2.2tn Cares Act under Trump improved the lot of the poor, with the poorest fifth reaching a multi-decade high of 8.2% in 2020, but it dipped to 7.4% by 2022 under Biden.
Trump’s One Big Beautiful Bill Act reduced the annual income of the poorest tenth of households by 3.1% on average (about $1,200) while boosting the top decile by 2.6% ($13,600).
The 400 richest Americans pay a smaller share of their income in taxes than the average Jane, according to UC Berkeley economists.
Unrealized capital gains account for 55% of the largest estates and are bequeathed tax-free.
Elon Musk’s wealth increased by $13.9bn between 2014 and 2018, but he paid only $455m in taxes on reported income of $1.52bn, according to ProPublica.

Key figures

Jason Furman, former chairman of the president’s council of economic advisers under Obama
Elon Musk, CEO of SpaceX
Donald Trump, former US president
Joe Biden, former US president
Eduardo Porter, journalist and author of the article
Steve Jobs, former Apple CEO
Mark Zuckerberg, Meta CEO
Larry Ellison, Oracle CEO
Larry Page, Google co-founder

Sources: The Guardian

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