Dividend tax
The dividend tax is the tax on corporate dividends.
George W. Bush proposed in 2003 to eliminate the U.S. dividend tax. As can be seen from the chart below, doing so would have little effect for the bottom 60% of wage-earners, and greatly reduce taxes for the upper 5%, weighted most heavily to the super-rich. More than half the benefits would go to people making more than $200,000 per year, a quarter to people making more than $1 million per year.
In the Netherlands there is a tax of 1.2 % per year on the value of the shares, regardless of the dividend.
TAX BENEFITS FOR 2003 BY INCOME:
Income Percentile: 0-20
Income Range*: $0-9,964
Average Change in Tax: -$6
Percentage of Total Income Tax Change: 0.4%
Income Percentile: 20-40
Income Range*: $9,965-21,349
Average Change in Tax: -$20
Percentage of Total Income Tax Change: 1.3%
Income Percentile: 40-60
Income Range*: $21,350-37,834
Average Change in Tax: -$47
Percentage of Total Income Tax Change: 3.0%
Income Percentile: 60-80
Income Range*: $37,835-68,329
Average Change in Tax: -$168
Percentage of Total Income Tax Change: 10.7%
Income Percentile: 80-90
Income Range*: $68,330-98,053
Average Change in Tax: -$304
Percentage of Total Income Tax Change: 9.7%
Income Percentile: 90-95
Income Range*: $98,054-133,858
Average Change in Tax: -$622
Percentage of Total Income Tax Change: 9.9%
Income Percentile: 95-99
Income Range*: $133,859-316,894
Average Change in Tax: -$1,777
Percentage of Total Income Tax Change: 22.7%
Income Percentile: 99-100
Income Range*: $316,895 and up
Average Change in Tax: -$13,243
Percentage of Total Income Tax Change: 42.3%
*Adjusted gross income on tax return