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Charts of the week: Tax cuts, union membership, and the cost of motor vehicle accidents

Click on the links or on the charts to go to the full research.

 

THE FEELING THAT CORPORATIONS DON’T PAY ENOUGH IS WHAT BOTHERS AMERICANS MOST ABOUT TAXES

While the tax plan recently released by the GOP and Trump administration grants generous tax breaks to wealthy Americans and corporations, research from Governance Studies Fellow Vanessa Williamson suggests that what bothers Americans most about taxes is “the feeling that some corporations don’t pay their fair share.”

Chart: What bothers Americans about taxes.
Asked of those who reported being bothered “a lot” by one or more of these (86 percent of sample). Citation: Pew Research Center for the People and the Press. February 18-22, 2015.

UNION MEMBERSHIP HAS FALLEN BY OVER 50 PERCENT

In a recent report from the Hamilton Project, Brookings experts analyze wage growth and stagnation over the course of several decades. In their study, the authors found union membership has fallen from 28 percent in 1956 to about 10 percent in 2016. Today, only 5 percent of private sector workers belong to a union.

Chart: Union membership

MOTOR VEHICLE DEATHS CAUSE OVER $400 BILLION IN ECONOMIC LOSSES ANNUALLY

A new report from the Metropolitan Policy Program examines the cost of motor vehicle deaths in America and the tools cities have available to design safer streets. “In 2010 alone, motor vehicle crashes caused economic losses of $242 billion due to lost workplace and household productivity, legal costs, medical bills, property damages, congestion costs, and environmental harm.”

Figure 2: Estimated cost of motor vehicle deaths, injuries, and property damage, 2013-2016

Authors