The 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA), signed by then-President Trump, was the most recent major overhaul to the IRS tax code. However, the legislation was criticized — by his opponents — for favoring corporations and wealthy taxpayers at the expense of middle class and low-income households. Proponents of the TCJA argued that income tax was reduced among five of seven tax brackets, and that the standard deduction was greatly increased.
In America’s early history, there was no official federal income tax at all, and it stayed that way throughout much of the 19th century. In fact, it took a constitutional amendment to authorize Congress to collect revenue through taxation, starting in 1913.
The original taxer-in-chief was none other than Abraham Lincoln, who levied the very first national income tax in American history through the Revenue Act of 1861. The government collected a 3% tax on incomes between $600 and $10,000 — and a 5% tax on incomes of more than $10,000 — to pay for the Civil War. On July 1, 1862, the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) was created and authorized to enforce collection. Congress repealed the tax in 1871.
In 1895, the Supreme Court struck down the federal income tax as unconstitutional, but in 1913, the 16th Amendment authorized Congress to collect revenue from taxpayers nationwide. It was the birth of the modern income tax.
Later that same year, President Wilson signed legislation that authorized the first income tax of the 20th century, which affected about 3% of taxpayers. Individuals would pay a tax of 1% on any income they earned over $3,000.
Herbert Hoover, the president who’s best known for fumbling America’s economic policy during the start of the Great Depression, was also one of the country’s most prolific tax raisers. The Revenue Act of 1932 raised the top rate from 25% to 63%, but no income bracket was spared. The corporate income tax also doubled from 12% to 24%.
A little less than 100 years after Lincoln gave the federal income tax its big debut, President Truman would bring revenue-raising to a whole new level. His reason for doing so was the same as Lincoln’s — to fund a war.
The Revenue Act of 1950 raised the minimum income tax to 20% and raised the top rate to an incredible 91% in order to pay for the Korean War. That means that even the lowest earners had to cough up one dollar in five, and the people at the top submitted to a brutal 91-9 split in favor of Uncle Sam.
At the Republican National Convention in 1988, George H.W. Bush emphatically stated “Read my lips: no new taxes.” The words would come back to haunt him. The Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1990 raised the top tax rate from Ronald Reagan’s 28% up to 31%.
While it wasn’t the biggest tax increase in history, it was one of the most consequential. After eating his words, Bush was held to a single term after losing to Bill Clinton.
President Harding died during his lone, scandal-plagued term in office, but not before he launched one of history’s greatest tax-cutting sprees. The World War I years had sent taxes soaring to 77% at the top income levels, according to the Cato Institute. A series of tax cuts throughout the 1920s, however, would take those rates down to some of the lowest percentages in history.
It all started with the Revenue Act of 1921, which sent the top tax rate down from 73% to 58% in 1922. In 1923, it dropped to 50%. The cuts continued under Harding’s successor, Calvin Coolidge, and by 1929 the top income tax rate was just 24%.
If today’s rich people complain that the wealthy shoulder too great a share of the tax burden, they should be happy that the highest rate in the top tax bracket is capped at 37%. According to The Atlantic, the top tax rate was often double that or more for over a decade after World War II — and all that revenue from the rich is what fueled the post-war boom.
President Eisenhower fought his own party to keep the highest tax rate at an astounding 90%, but President Kennedy finally lowered it to 70% upon taking office.
No modern president was more committed to cutting taxes than Ronald Reagan. The Economic Recovery Tax Act of 1981 lowered the top tax rate from 70% to 50%. Five years later in 1986, Reagan signed the Tax Reform Act, which lowered it again to 28%.
The two acts together are known as the Reagan tax cuts. When Reagan took office, the top rate was 33% higher than it is today (37%), and when he left office, it was 9% lower.
President Clinton signed the Taxpayer Relief Act of 1997, an enormous tax-reduction bill that radically overhauled the IRS code, making more than 800 changes to U.S. tax law. Many of its most important provisions benefited middle-class and low-income households, according to the Congressional Research Service, while also slashing the capital gains tax.
The law created what would become some of the most important modern provisions in the tax code, including the child tax credit, the Roth IRA, and the education savings account.
Learning from the mistakes of his father, George W. Bush followed through on his commitment to lower taxes with a pair of new laws known as the Bush tax cuts. Although they contained a few middle-class provisions, the lion’s share of the breaks went to corporations and the highest earners.
According to the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities on the Bush tax cuts, “The top 1% of households received average tax cuts of more than $50,000 each year. On average, these households received a total tax cut of over $570,000 over this period.”
Rob Poindexter contributed to a previous version of this article.
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