The question sounds simple enough: What would happen if the wealthiest Americans paid taxes at the same rate as everyone else? But when you actually run the numbers, the answer gets complicated fast.

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I asked ChatGPT to break down what would happen if the top 1% of taxpayers paid the same effective tax rate as the lower 75% of Americans. The results weren’t what most people would expect.

Here’s where things stand right now. The top 1% of taxpayers pay around 26% of their income in federal income taxes. That’s their effective rate after all the deductions and credits get factored in.

The lower 75% of earners pay somewhere between 10% and 15% depending on where they fall in that range. The bottom half of earners pay even less, around 3% to 4%.

In 2022, the top 1% handed over about $860 billion to the IRS, which was roughly 40% of all individual income tax revenue collected that year.

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This is where it gets interesting. If you made the top 1% pay the same effective rate as the lower 75%, you’d be lowering their taxes, not raising them.

Think about that for a second. The conversation around tax fairness usually assumes the rich are getting away with something. But on pure income tax rates, they’re already paying a higher percentage than most Americans.

If you dropped the top 1% down to a 15% or 18% effective rate to match the lower 75%, federal tax revenue would fall significantly. That’s the opposite of what people picture when they talk about making the wealthy “pay their fair share.”

The frustration most people feel isn’t really about income tax rates. It’s about how different types of money get taxed differently.

Wealthy people make most of their money from investments, not paychecks. Investment income gets taxed at lower rates than wages. That’s where the disconnect happens. Someone working a job pays more on their salary than an investor pays on their stock gains.

If you closed those loopholes and made investment income face the same tax treatment as regular wages, that’s when you’d see massive revenue increases. ChatGPT explained that economists estimate this approach could bring in anywhere from hundreds of billions to over $1 trillion per year.

But that scenario requires changing how we tax wealth, not just adjusting rates.

There’s no official government estimate for exactly what would happen in these scenarios. The IRS provides data on what currently exists, but projecting changes gets messy fast.

People change their behavior when tax rates change. They find new deductions, move money around or structure deals differently. Some wealthy taxpayers would probably shift income to avoid higher rates. Others might leave certain investments entirely.

Economists disagree pretty strongly on how much taxable income would shrink if rates went up. Those assumptions make a huge difference in revenue projections.

The big takeaway is that tax fairness is more complicated than a single percentage. The top 1% already pays a higher effective income tax rate than most Americans. Matching them downward would cost the government money.

The real issue isn’t the rates themselves. It’s the structure. Investment income faces different rules than wages. Capital gains get preferential treatment. Estate taxes have massive exemptions. The wealthy have access to deductions and strategies that regular workers don’t.

When people say “tax the rich,” they usually mean closing those gaps, not literally matching percentages with lower earners. The conversation just doesn’t always use those precise terms.

ChatGPT laid out the math and it’s pretty clear: If you want the wealthy to contribute more, you can’t just adjust their rate to match everyone else’s. You have to change what gets taxed and how it gets taxed. That’s a much bigger lift than just tweaking percentages.

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This article originally appeared on GOBankingRates.com: I Asked ChatGPT How Much the Top 1% Would Pay If Taxed at the Same Effective Rate as the Lower 75%