Business Insider: 29 Facts about Extreme Income Inequality in America That Will Blow Your Mind

| | Bookmark and Share

Full, Original Post

by Michael Snyder

June 17, 2011

Today, average Americans have less power relative to the monolithic corporate and governmental institutions that dominate our society than at any other point in U.S. history....

What U.S. corporations are able to get away with is absolutely amazing.

The following figures come directly out of a report by Citizens for Tax Justice.  These are combined figures for the tax years 2008, 2009 and 2010.

During those three years, all of the corporations below made a lot of money.  Yet all of them paid net taxes that were below zero for those three years combined.

How is that possible?  Well, it turns out that instead of paying in taxes to the federal government, they were actually getting money back.

So for these corporations, their rate of taxation was actually below zero.

If you have not seen these before, you are going to have a hard time believing some of these statistics.....

*Honeywell*
Profits: $4.9 billion
Taxes: -$34 million

*Fed Ex*
Profits: $3 billion
Taxes: -$23 million

*Wells Fargo*
Profits: $49.37 billion
Taxes: -$681 million

*Boeing*
Profits: $9.7 billion
Taxes: -$178 million

*Verizon*
Profits: $32.5 billion
Taxes: -$951 million

*Dupont*
Profits: $2.1 billion
Taxes -$72 million

*American Electric Power*
Profits: $5.89 billion
Taxes -$545 million

*General Electric*
Profits: $7.7 billion
Taxes: -$4.7 billion

Are you starting to get the picture?

I wish I could make $7.7 billion, pay no taxes and have the government give me $4.7 billion on top of it.

Our system has become corrupted beyond all recognition.

We need to throw out the current system of taxation and come up with something entirely new.

In fact, the truth is that for most of U.S. history there was not a federal income tax at all.  But that is a story for another day.

If you believe in the U.S. Constitution and in the republic that our founding fathers established, then the very high concentrations of wealth and power in our society today should greatly concern you.  Income inequality is not a "Democrat" or a "Republican" issue.  A vibrant, thriving middle class should be a goal all of us can embrace.