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The only taxes placed on 18th century Americans after the Constitution was ratified was distilled spirits, tobacco and snuff, refined sugar, carriages, property sold at auction and certain legal documents. In the 19th century there was the addition of property taxes upon homes starting in certain cities in the 1830's and became standard in all states by the end of the century. Using the data table you provided in the document the wages in gold dollars will have to be converted into gold ounces then using the Coinage Act of 1790 to find the equivalent amount. The current spot price for gold is $1,206.40 for an ounce. Thus on the table the $2500 disposible income is converted into 2 ounces of gold. That translates into $20 gold dollars. At the upper end of the scale, it is 33 ounces of gold which is $600 gold dollars.
In the 18th-19th centuries wages ranged from $1 and up per day depending upon the job of the person. I'll use a miller that made $2 a day for this with a weekly wage of $14 gold dollars. He didn't have to pay any of the taxes we have to pay now, so his average expenses would have been roughly $2-4 a week in gold dollars (assuming he's single), so he was left with $10 gold dollars. That is a half an ounce of gold, so in today's money that would be $603.20 per week or
$31,366.4 a year. His total disposable income would be at 72%.
i'm sorry, the info i provided was disposable income in 2000 dollars . no conversion necessary. and you still provided nothing to back up your disposable income claim.