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The top 1% earn about $2.1 million on average and are considered to be the largest beneficiaries of tax and economic policy of recent decades, just as global competition severely hurt wages of factory workers. A Tax Policy Center (Brookings Institution and Urban Institute backed) study shows that increasing taxes on the 1.13 million households in the top 1% from a federal rate of 33.4% currently to 40% would generate $157 billion, enough to provide for tution free educaton in colleges and universities in the U.S., finance spending on infrastructure, and provide assistance to the middle class for high health premiums. Public opinion in the U.S. favors higher taxes for the top 1% to pay for programs that increase opportunity for the middle class and workers with low incomes. Education is a great leveler of income disparities over time, one of the reasons the U.S. offered tution free education to returning veterans after World War II. Incomes for people in this income group of the top 1% would still be about $1 million a year after the tax increase, according to the Tax Policy Center.
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