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Politics

How the Bottom 20% Lives – On Your Taxes

by June 2, 2025
June 2, 2025

Photo courtesy of WETM / Screenshot from YouTube

Despite Democrat claims about the rich not paying their fair share, IRS data shows that the top 20% of earners pay more than 65% of all federal income taxes, while the bottom 20% pay effectively nothing, receiving more in benefits than they are paying in taxes.

According to data from the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) and the U.S. Census Bureau, the bottom 20% of U.S. income earners (households in the lowest income quintile) receive a significant portion, often the majority, of their income from government transfers such as Medicaid, SNAP (food stamps), housing subsidies, and refundable tax credits like the Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC).

Roughly 80% of Americans are taxpayers, while the remaining 20% are net tax consumers. To put it in simple terms: taxpayers eat what they kill, while tax consumers live off what others have hunted. They rely on the labor and productivity of the working class to sustain their standard of living.

Although liberals often portray welfare recipients as disabled or unable to work, the reality is that most could work, but choose not to. According to the Congressional Budget Office, 60% of working-age adults in the welfare-dependent population did not work at all during the year, and many were not officially classified as disabled.

Among recipients of SNAP alone, roughly 28% are classified as able-bodied adults without dependents (ABAWDs). Data from the Census Bureau and the Department of Health and Human Services show that roughly 40–50% of these individuals are able-bodied adults of working age. And yet, they have somehow managed to game the system and continue receiving benefits.

The controversy over the “Big Beautiful Bill” was, as usual, misrepresented. The media framed it as cruel cuts, as if benefits were being stripped from some old, crippled woman born with her heart on the outside, raising several mixed-race children. A “10% cut,” for example, is always portrayed as meaning a disabled or aged person living on $2,000 a month will now get $1,800.

But that’s generally not what a budget cut means. In most cases, it simply means the bar is being raised to qualify for benefits, so that healthy, working-age people are encouraged to go back to work.

And proof of this is that Democrats are always quick to say, “With the new cuts, 12 million people could lose their benefits.” Yes, that’s exactly what a cut is supposed to do: reduce the total number of people on benefits, not necessarily reduce payments to those who truly need them. As is so often the case in politics between the two parties, terms need to be defined. Most people agree that those who truly need help should get it, we just want to narrow the definition of who qualifies.

Democrats portray benefits as a temporary lifeline, but in reality, they often create long-term dependence. States routinely report challenges in getting these individuals into job training or employment programs.

Meanwhile, many recipients get more in refundable tax credits than they owe, along with a wide range of benefits from both federal and state programs, including SNAP (food stamps), Medicaid, Section 8 housing, utility subsidies, and child tax credits. With their rent, medical care, food, and other expenses covered without working, they have little incentive to put in the effort that would disqualify them from receiving free money.

Compounding the issue, many of the households receiving benefits suffer from chronic social breakdown. According to the U.S. Census Bureau, more than 70% of children in low-income, inner-city communities are raised in fatherless homes. These children face dramatically worse outcomes across the board: the National Fatherhood Initiative reports that children without fathers are four times more likely to live in poverty, twice as likely to drop out of school, and more likely to engage in criminal activity or be incarcerated.

Studies from the Brookings Institution and Pew Charitable Trusts further show that welfare dependency is often passed down through generations. A child whose parents received public assistance is significantly more likely to end up on welfare themselves, and the probability increases further if both parents and grandparents relied on benefits. In some communities, families are now entering their fourth generation of government dependence, with no expectation or cultural pressure to exit the welfare system.

And the left either denies that any of this is true — or, worse, believes it’s a good thing.

The post How the Bottom 20% Lives – On Your Taxes appeared first on The Gateway Pundit.

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