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Romney had been consolidating GOP support before Saturday's South Carolina primary, in which a victory could all but seal his nomination. The focus on his wealth is an unwanted distraction for him as he seeks to win votes in a state where the unemployment rate, at 9.9 percent, is among the highest in the nation, and amid rising public concern over income inequality. President Barack Obama's campaign advisers contend voters are unlikely to back a wealthy Republican with financial-industry ties at a time of lingering economic distress. The maximum marginal U.S. income tax rate of 35 percent applies -- in theory more than practice
-- to households with taxable income of over about $388,500. Like many wealthy people, the Romneys have been helped by changes in federal tax policy that have placed much lower tax rates on investment income
-- from dividends, interest and capital gains from the sale of stocks and other assets
-- than on wages and salaries, the source of income for most Americans. Under the Bush-era tax cuts strongly supported by most Republicans, such investment income, including gains on securities held for a year or longer, is subject to a tax rate of 15 percent. According to the congressional Joint Committee on Taxation, an average federal tax rate of 15 percent
-- including both income and payroll taxes -- would apply to households with taxable incomes of from $75,000 to $100,000. Obama and his wife paid federal taxes of just over 25 percent of their 2010 income of $1.7 million, mostly from the books he's written. Texas Gov. Rick Perry and his wife paid roughly 24 percent of their 2010 income of $217,447.
[Associated
Press;
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