Let:
Taxable income on Federal return = I1
Federal tax on I1= T1
Taxable income on State return = I2
State tax on I2= T2
Federal Effective rate = T1/I1
State Effective rate = T2/I2
Total Effective rate = (T1+T2)/I1
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For what purpose?
>Let:
>
>Taxable income on Federal return = I1
>Federal tax on I1= T1
Do you mean _this person's_ Federal tax, or the general Federal tax on
that level of income?
>Taxable income on State return = I2
>State tax on I2= T2
Same question.
>Federal Effective rate = T1/I1
>State Effective rate = T2/I2
>Total Effective rate = (T1+T2)/I1
Why I1 and not I2? Why not actual income rather than either type of
taxable?
Seth
> Taxable income on Federal return = I1
> Federal tax on I1= T1
> Taxable income on State return = I2
> State tax on I2= T2
>
> Federal Effective rate = T1/I1
> State Effective rate = T2/I2
> Total Effective rate = (T1+T2)/I1
I would suggest including Social Security taxes for accuracy.
On my returns they are the 2nd highest tax- between federal and state.
For even more precision you could include property taxes and
the estimated state taxes in the IRS tables.
Plus you need to subtract the SS tax made for deferred income like
401Ks and regular IRAs, because these havent really been taxed yet.
I've done this calculation for a couple decades and found a general
downward trend in that period thanks to Clinton/Bush tax cuts.
(34% -> 29% total effective tax)
Alas, I suspect this trend has reached its end.