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The wealthy pay less tax not because they earn less, but because they focus on reducing *taxable income*. Investments like real estate provide legal deductions such as depreciation, which significantly lowers the income they actually pay taxes on, a concept unavailable to most W-2 earners.

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Billionaires like Mark Zuckerberg legally pay near-zero income tax by taking a $1 salary. Their wealth comes from stock appreciation. They access cash not by selling stock (a taxable event), but by borrowing against it. The core strategy is avoiding taxable income altogether.

The super-rich avoid capital gains taxes by borrowing against their appreciating assets instead of selling them. This allows them to fund their lifestyle tax-free. Since assets are only taxed upon sale, this deferral becomes permanent if they hold the assets until death, when the cost basis resets for heirs.

For high earners, strategic tax mitigation is a primary wealth-building tool, not just a way to save money. The capital saved from taxes represents a guaranteed, passive investment return. This reframes tax planning from a compliance chore to a core financial growth strategy.

A tax deduction lowers your taxable income, saving you an amount proportional to your tax bracket. In contrast, a tax credit directly subtracts from your final tax bill, offering a full dollar-for-dollar reduction. Prioritizing actions that yield credits provides a much larger financial benefit.

The wealthiest individuals don't have traditional paychecks. Instead, they hold appreciating assets like stock and take out loans against that wealth to fund their lifestyles. This avoids triggering capital gains or income taxes, a key reason proponents are pushing for a direct wealth tax in California to address this loophole.

Contrary to common belief, Arthur Laffer asserts that historical data shows a clear pattern: every time the highest tax rates on top earners were raised, the government collected less tax revenue from them. The wealthy use legal means to avoid taxes, and economic activity declines, ultimately harming the broader economy.

Billionaire wealth taxes are easily dodged by relocating. A more robust policy would tax capital gains based on the jurisdiction where the value was created, preventing billionaires from moving to a zero-tax state just before selling stock to avoid taxes.

The US tax system disproportionately penalizes high-income 'workhorses' (e.g., doctors, lawyers) who earn from labor. In contrast, the super-rich, who derive wealth from capital gains and have mobility, benefit from loopholes that result in dramatically lower effective tax rates.

The ultra-wealthy use specialists for deep, proactive tax planning that leverages the entire tax code for wealth building. This is distinct from the role of most CPAs, who primarily focus on tax preparation and compliance, acting like an advanced version of tax software.

Historically high marginal tax rates in the 1950s-70s were largely ineffective due to widespread loopholes and expense account abuse. Modern tax systems are more progressive primarily because they have been tightened, making it much harder for the wealthy to avoid taxes, rather than simply from headline rate increases.