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Tax the poor! Another brilliant Republican idea. (Of Several Minds).


Prepare yourself for the latest cause of the political right: You are about to hear a great deal about how working Americans at the bottom of the economy are not paying enough in taxes.

I am not making this up. The Wall Street Journal's editorial page always provides important clues about the Next New Thing among conservatives, and there it was last month assailing "The Non-Taxpaying Class" (November 20).

You would think the tax cutters on that page would be happy with a policy begun under Ronald Reagan to lift the income-tax burden from Americans struggling to get by on modest paychecks. But no, it seems that because of our tax structure, the favorite causes of supply-siders--big tax cuts for wealthy Americans and investors--are just not popular enough. "While we would opt for a perfect world in which everybody paid far less in taxes," the editors write, "our increasingly two-tiered tax system is undermining the political consensus for cutting taxes at all."

The editorial writers are roiled by the fact that the richest Americans, those with incomes of over $500,000 a year, account for 28 percent of total tax revenue, and that the top 5 percent "coughed up more than half of total tax revenue." The Journal contrasts these unfortunate souls with the thriving person who earns $12,000 a year and ends up "paying a little less than 4 percent of income in taxes."

Worse yet, various tax credits, mostly aimed at helping families raise kids, further reduce the income-tax burden on low-income folks to the point that "almost 13 percent of all workers have no tax liability and so are indifferent INDIFFERENT. To have no bias nor partiality. 7 Conn. 229. A juror, an arbitrator, and a witness, ought to be indifferent, and when they are not so, they may be challenged. See 9 Conn. 42.  to income tax rates. And that doesn't include another 16.5 million who have some income but don't file at all."

Then comes this remarkable sentence: "Who are these lucky duckies Lucky duckies is a term that was used in Wall Street Journal editorials starting on 20 November 2002 to refer to Americans who pay no federal income tax because they are at an income level that is below the tax line (after deductions and credits). ?"

"Lucky duckies"?

Now I credit my friends on that editorial page with strong principles and powerful feelings of compassion toward high-end taxpayers. But it will certainly come as news to low-income families getting by on two small paychecks that they are lucky duckies. The truth is, low- and middle-income people do pay a lot in taxes. They just don't happen to pay the taxes that supply-side conservatives want to cut.

The Journal's editors make only a passing comment on payroll taxes Payroll Tax

Tax an employer withholds and/or pays on behalf of their employees based on the wage or salary of the employee. In most countries, including the U.S., both state and federal authorities collect some form of payroll tax.
, but the basic FICA FICA
abbr.
Federal Insurance Contributions Act

Noun 1. FICA - a tax on employees and employers that is used to fund the Social Security system
income tax - a personal tax levied on annual income

 tax takes a much bigger share from middle and low incomes than from large ones. The 6.2 percent tax applies on incomes up to $84,900, meaning that if you make that or less, you pay the full 6.2 percent. Richard Sims Richards William Sims (born 23 July, 1979) in Chinhoyi, Mashonaland is a Zimbabwean cricketer. An allrounder, he bats in the middle order and bowls right-arm offbreak. He is a good driver of the ball and is a straight hitter. , the policy director of the Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy, took the recently published example of a top CEO (1) (Chief Executive Officer) The highest individual in command of an organization. Typically the president of the company, the CEO reports to the Chairman of the Board.  who earned $122.5 million in 2000 and calculated that his FICA tax rate was 0.000043 percent. Lucky ducky.

Sims also notes that sales and excise taxes excise taxes, governmental levies on specific goods produced and consumed inside a country. They differ from tariffs, which usually apply only to foreign-made goods, and from sales taxes, which typically apply to all commodities other than those specifically exempted.  hit hardest at low- and middle-income people who have to spend most of their earnings on taxable items, can't save a lot, and don't put much of their money into financial, accounting, and legal services legal services n. the work performed by a lawyer for a client. , which generally aren't taxed. According to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 Sims's figures, the bottom 20 percent of citizens in Illinois pay 10.8 percent of their income in sales and excise taxes, compared with only 1.4 percent paid by the top 1 percent of earners. In California, the comparable figures are 7.4 percent and 1.0 percent; in Arizona, 8.1 percent and 1.2 percent; in Colorado, 5.1 percent and 0.8 percent.

Yes, the wealthy are paying more in federal taxes, but for reasons that are good news for the wealthy--"largely because they receive a much larger share of the total income in the nation," says Isaac Shapiro of the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities The Center on Budget and Policy Priorities (CBPP) is a non-profit think tank which describes itself as a "policy organization ... working at the federal and state levels on fiscal policy and public programs that affect low- and moderate-income families and individuals. . Between 1979 and 1997, the last year for which figures are available, the average after-tax income of the top 1 percent of households, adjusted for inflation, rose by $414,000--a 157 percent gain. For the middle fifth of households--the middle of the middle class--the comparable gain was 10 percent, or $3,400. The bottom fifth was stagnant stagnant /stagĀ·nant/ (stagĀ“nant)
1. motionless; not flowing or moving.

2. inactive; not developing or progressing.
.

Over the last generation, the federal government's best deed for the working poor--it started with Reagan and gained momentum under Bill Clinton--was to reduce federal taxes on their labor and give low-income families an additional boost with the Earned Income Tax Credit The United States federal Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC) is a refundable tax credit that reduces or eliminates the taxes that low-income married working people pay (such as payroll taxes) and also frequently operates as a wage subsidy for low-income workers. . If the goal of welfare reform is to encourage work, we ought to be thinking of more ways of lifting the fortunes of the poorly paid. That's not class warfare. It's good policy. The last thing we need to worry about is whether poor Americans are taxed too little.

[c] 2002, Washington Post Writers Group
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Copyright 2002, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Article Details
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Author:Dionne, E.J., Jr.
Publication:Commonweal
Date:Dec 20, 2002
Words:789
Previous Article:Et cetera.
Next Article:Family connections: Monsignor O'Brien's Daytop Village. (Of Several Minds).



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