Presented by Citizens for Tax Justice

A new Wash­ington Post-ABC News poll shows that only nine percent of Amer­icans believe the tax system works for the middle class, with 68 percent saying it actually favors the wealthy. The survey shows a public over­whelm­ingly convinced that our tax system is unfair and that taxes should be raised on wealthy Americans.

The belief that the tax system is unfair has surely been fueled by the recent reve­lation of pres­i­dential candidate Mitt Romney’s super low 14% tax rate on his $21 million income. In fact, the same poll found that 66 percent of the public generally – and even a near majority of Repub­licans! – believe that Romney is not paying his fair share in taxes.

Not surpris­ingly, then, Amer­icans over­whelm­ingly support increasing taxes on the wealthy, according to this poll, with 72 percent saying that taxes should be increased on million­aires. Of course, time and time again polls have shown the public’s robust support for progressive taxation.

A Growing Gap Between Small and Big Business

In related news, a nationwide survey released by the American Sustainable Business Council, Main Street Alliance and Small Business Majority shows that small business owners are fed up with how our corporate tax system favors big corpo­ra­tions at the expense of small businesses.

Indeed, 9 out of 10 small business owners said that big corpo­ra­tions use loop­holes to avoid taxes that small busi­nesses have to pay, with three quarters of the small business owners noting that their business is harmed by such loop­holes. The same survey found that 67 percent of small business owners believe big corpo­ra­tions pay less than their fair share.

Even when small and large busi­neses agree that they want more tax handouts from Congress, they’re talking about very different things, according to a new Bloomberg ( subscription only) poll. Asked what tax changes would help them most, advisors to smaller busi­nesses prior­itize things like reducing payroll taxes on employers and making permanent the deduction for self-employment. Big business prior­ities included 100 percent expensing (a.k.a. bonus depre­ci­ation) of equipment and complete overhaul of the corporate tax code – including a reduced tax rate.

These studies are more reason corporate lobbyists and their patrons in Congress should stop pretending they’re all about small business. They’re not.

Citizens for Tax Justice

Citizens for Tax Justice, founded in 1979, is a 501 ©(4) public interest research and advocacy orga­ni­zation focusing on federal, state and local tax policies and their impact upon our nation. CTJ’s mission is to give ordinary people a greater voice in the devel­opment of tax laws. Against the armies of special interest lobbyists for corpo­ra­tions and the wealthy, CTJ fights for:

— Fair taxes for middle and low-income families
— Requiring the wealthy to pay their fair share
— Closing corporate tax loop­holes
— Adequately funding important government services
— Reducing the federal debt
— Taxation that mini­mizes distortion of economic markets

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